Sunday, September 1, 2013

struggles in success






I just came across this article, which I thought had pretty discouraging implications. A new study has confirmed a tension many of us have already encountered- male discomfort with their partner’s success. The article notes:

“It didn’t seem to matter to men what the circumstances of their girlfriends’ success was. Whether the success was social or intellectual, whether it related to the boyfriend’s failure or was just something the woman achieved independent of anything the boyfriend did, the men still tended to feel worse about themselves when their girlfriends succeeded”

I found this article interesting because it demonstrates how men are also negatively impacted by the gender stereotypes that persist to this day. Obviously this trend negatively effects women- the article theorizes that power struggles could be an instigator to intimate partner violence, and in general, could make women feel insecure about their successes. However, I think it is also important to consider how topics and issues that we discuss in women’s studies classes impact other groups as well. I know multiple young men my age that scoff at the idea of a women’s studies classes, and fail to see the ways that these issues impact their mothers, sisters, girlfriends, classmates, and even themselves. I thought this was a great example of how dysfunctional cultural perceptions can negatively impact such individuals who think women's studies issues only concern the nagging bra-burners.

4 comments:

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  2. Thank you so much for posting this, Hannah! I think this is a serious problem, especially on college and university campuses. I think it's a huge reason why there's this "hook-up culture" and rape culture at institutions of HIGHER LEARNING. Ignorance.
    After my boyfriend took that intro to women's studies class, he left every class feeling enlightened and as he put it, "like a fog had been lifted", he say what was always there he just wasn't informed on the issues. He believes even now that everyone should be required to take at least one women and gender class.
    Although I agree that academic classes are (obviously) great setting for learning and growth, but I think learning from peers experiences is important too. A dialogic setting, a safe space where all genders and identities can learn from each other. I guess in a perfect world..

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  3. This is a good example of how feminism and getting rid of these gender differences can benefit both men and women.

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  4. Totally agree ^^ I'm thinking of trying to start some sort of campaign to try and get more men on campus involved/ or interested in women's studies classes for the small service project, if anyone is interested in helping! I would like to highlight things like this so as to frame feminism as it should be: an issue for both sexes, all genders, everybody!

    let me know if you want to collaborate!

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