Essay Topic Hub

Masculinity
Essays

772+ paper examples, study guides & outlines

772 papers
1 subject area
UG & Grad levels
Free to browse
About This Topic

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.

772 papers
Sort by:
Paper Doctorate
Communication -- Gender and Communication the Parameters
Communication – Gender and Communication "Femininity" is best defined as sensitivity and awareness, a firm set of psychological traits that is not reflected in behavior. Actions are not masculine or feminine, but approaches to them are masculine or feminine. Humanity exists in a great array of sexual characteristics neither distinguished nor dictated by genitals. Anne Fausto-Sterling supports this concept in explaining the broad spectrum of genders. Nancy Mairs also supports this concept by pointing out and encouraging the psychological traits of sensitivity and awareness in her 14-year-old son. Opposition to this concept is deep-seated, particularly by those who deem femininity to be the opposite of masculinity and those who believe there are certain behaviors that are essentially feminine, and other behaviors that are not. Fortunately, feminists such as Mairs and science readily refute the reasons for confining gender definitions.
Research Paper Doctorate
Auteurism in Cinema
Giving Howard Hawks the label of film auteur was a bit of revisionist history initiated by the New Wave Cinema of France during the late 1940s into the 50s. Championed by directors Jean Luc Godard and Francois Truffaut,…
Paper High School
Role of Men in Commercials Past and Present
The characters of males in advertising has changed over time. In the earlier days of print and television advertising, as well as on the radio, males were the alpha and usually domineering over the subdued and…
Paper Undergraduate
Emotional Experience and Differences in Gender
Gender is a biological reality with many social consequences. The paper addresses several terms as a context within which to consider emotional experiences because of differences in gender.
Paper Doctorate
Criminal behavior: causes, patterns, and prevention
The recent shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School has opened up the national conversation on violence and viewing violent video games once again. This paper does not attempt to settle the debate once and for all: it is a literature review of the subject, encompassing both scholarly, peer-reviewed research and popular journal articles on the link between viewing violence and enacting violence.
Paper Undergraduate
Sexual violence prevention strategies and approaches
Victoria L. Banyard, Mary M. Moynihan, and Elizabethe G. Plante conducted a meta-analysis based on 46 studies. They study how exposure to pornographic materials is connected with various negative outcomes such as an…
Research Paper Doctorate
Art as a political statement
It is almost impossible to completely separate art from the social and political context in which it originates. When considering art works from a variety of contexts and situations, it is clear that artist as often as…
Paper Doctorate
Sociology: Changing Societies in a Diverse World
Sociology: Changing Societies in a Diverse World (Fourth Edition)
Research Paper Doctorate
Jack the Ripper and Victorian London crime
¶ … psychological examination of the story of Jack the Ripper. The actions of Jack the Ripper would pale in comparison to some of the more modern serial killers but the tale of Jack the Ripper lives on as one of the…
Paper Undergraduate
Stephen Crane\'s the Red Badge of Courage
Stephen Crane's Red Badge of Courage offers remarkable psychological insight into the experience of war. With vivid detail sparing nothing, Crane shows the reader the brutality of war.