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Masculinity
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Masculinity is the study of how societies define, enforce, and reproduce ideas about what it means to be male. It appears across disciplines including sociology, gender studies, cultural studies, literature, and psychology. The topic is academically rich because masculinity is not a fixed biological state but a set of contested social constructions that shift across cultures and historical moments. Frameworks such as Michael Kaufman's triad of men's power and tools like the Bem Sex Role Inventory give students structured ways to analyze how masculine identity is produced and measured. Literary texts such as The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde and films such as Pumping Iron and Dr Strangelove provide concrete cultural objects through which these ideas can be examined. C. J. Pascoe's work on masculinity and sexuality in high school settings further demonstrates how masculine norms operate at the level of everyday interaction.

Student papers on this topic take a range of approaches. Some use close textual or film analysis to read masculine symbolism and gender roles in specific works. Others apply sociological frameworks comparatively, examining how masculinity functions differently across contexts such as Japanese fatherhood, high school peer culture, or competitive bodybuilding. Several papers explore the relationship between masculinity and femininity directly, including how physical activity and food consumption reflect socially constructed gender differences. Historical and cultural comparison is a common organizing strategy.

A strong essay on masculinity grounds its argument in a clear, specific claim about how masculine norms are constructed or challenged in a defined context. Evidence drawn from cultural texts, sociological theory, or observed behavior carries the most weight when it is analyzed rather than simply described. The most common pitfall is treating masculinity as natural or self-evident — a strong thesis always treats it as something that requires explanation.

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Paper Doctorate
Boys Do Cry: Hilary Swank
This paper examines a critical review of the movie Boys Don't Cry. That review,Jean Bobby Noble's "Boys do Cry: Hilary Swank and the Politics of a Pronoun," examines the role that gender identity plays in the movie. The paper concludes with the author's commentary on the portrayal of Lana's sexuality in the movie.
Paper Undergraduate
Society - Gender Theory Theoretical
Human behavior is influenced tremendously by different elements of biology and culture. Even the most fundamental attributes of the individual, such as gender-specific expression is undoubtedly a combination of…
Essay Doctorate
Feminism: an academic overview
Feminism is defined as movements that are aimed to protect rights of the women al around the world. These rights include voting rights, political, economic as well as social rights. The second main aim of the feminist movement is to make sure that women get equal education as well as employment rights. Those who believe in feminism are termed as feminists. Feminist theory One of the most important theories in feminism is the feminist theory. The main fact that has been mentioned in the theory is that there is a need to understand the roles that have been played by women all around the world. Secondly based on these roles, increased cases of gender inequality are to be assessed1. Sex and gender inequality and the social construction of sex and gender has been the focus of feminist theory. An important fact in the case of feminism is in relation to the kind of criticism that it has received in the past as it has been argued that most of the arguments of feminists were in favor of white and educated women. This is the main reason of creation of different classes of feminism that include ethnic variation and multicultural variations.
Essay Doctorate
Business and literacy rates in Spain compared to the United States
As of late 2010, rumors in the financial community persist that Spain is going to be the next Eurozone nation to suffer an economic crisis. Spain's high unemployment rate, coupled with a lack of economic recovery and…
Paper Doctorate
Geography and Cross-Cultural Communication in Global Business
(Jameson (2007) has defined geography as one of the possible components of cultural identity needed for cross cultural communication in global business. Discuss how a company might take this component into account in…
Paper Doctorate
Memory of Elena a Poem to Explain
Often a poem's meaning is apparent from only the title. This is not the case with "The Memory of Elena," a poem written by Carolyn Forche in 1981. At first, the title suggests a poetic recollection of Elena, but as the…
Paper Doctorate
AIDS -- by Mark Hunter
The author provides a vivid glimpse into the challenges posed by the AIDS epidemic in Africa to many people hoping to develop emotionally and sexually intimate relationships. He also details the tremendously difficult…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Theories of culture in human relations
In his attempt to argue the importance of culture in human relations, Geert Hofstede (2005) resorts to the following introductory paragraph for the first chapter of his book Culture and Organizations.
Research Paper Undergraduate
War in Literature at First
At first reading, Things They Carried appears to be a book about the Viet Nam War, especially the negative aspects of this war or conflict. However, Tim O'Brien is going further and actually using this vehicle as a…
Paper Doctorate
Does Gender Matter in Sports? Identity, Inequality & Injury
In the modern Western world, gender matters in sports for at least two reasons: gender identification and injuries, specifically concussions. The masculine identity traditionally developed to include strength, toughness, competitiveness, aggression and the ability to endure pain. Rightly or wrongly, those concepts have included males in sports while excluding females. Based on the writings of Michel Foucault, some modern thinkers are challenging those traditionally oppressive male-centered concepts in sports, though males still dominate. In addition, female high school athletes reportedly sustain a far greater number of concussions than do male high school athletes. Researchers have suggested several reasons for this phenomenon. However, the fact remains that gender matters in terms of high school athletic concussions. Consequently, as of the date of this paper, gender matters in sports.