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Section 25 Question 25 | Test | Table of Contents
Society's
role How do boys get these ideas about male identity and manhood? Often from parents, but our whole society contributes to the process. As many as one of every six boys are sexually assaulted, and many, many more are hit, yelled at, teased, and goaded into fighting to prove they're tough. At the Oakland Men's Project [an organization devoted to eradicating male violence, racism, and homophobia], we believe that many boys become convinced that they will be violated until they learn to use force to protect themselves. Then they move to take their pain and anger out on other the way older males have done to them. In our work we often use role play as a way of getting at some of these issues. One particularly effective exercise involves a ten-year-old and his father: the father arrives home from work and demands that the boy turn off the TV, then berates him for the messiness of his room. The boy tries to explain; the father tells him to shut up, to stop making excuses. Fueling the father's anger is the fact that he's disappointed by the boy's school report card. The father shoves the report card in his son's face and demands to know why he has gotten a "D" in math. The boy says he did his best. The father tells him that he is stupid. The boy protests and begins to stand up. The father shoves him down, saying. "Don't you dare get up in my face!" The boy is visibly upset, and begins to cry. The father explodes: "Now what? You little mama's boy! You sissy! You make me sick. When are you going to grow up and start acting like a man?" When we do this exercise in schools, it gets the boys' undivided attention because most have experienced being humiliated by an older male. Indeed, the power of this exercise is that it is so familiar. When asked what they learned from such encounters, the boys often say things like: A man is tough. A man is in control. A man doesn't cry. A man doesn't take crap. We write the boys' comments on a blackboard, draw a box around them, and label it the "Act Like a Man" box. We talk about how males in this culture are socialized to stay in the box. Eventually we ask: What happens if you step out of it, if you stop acting tough enough or man enough? Invariably we hear that you get called names like "fag," "queer," "mama's boy," "punk," "girl." Asked why, the boys say it's a challenge, that they're expected to fight to prove themselves. Homophobia and fear of being identified with women are powerful messages boys get from an early age, and they are expected to fight to prove that they're tough and not gay-that they're in the box. Using exercises, like the father/son interchange, helps us examine how the male sex role often sets men up to be dominating, controlling, and abusive. We ask: How safe is it to stay in the "Act Like a Man" box? Usually, most admit that it isn't safe, because boys and men continually challenge each other to prove that they're in the box. When a boy or man is challenged, he can prove he's a man either by fighting the challenger or by finding someone "weaker"-a female or a more vulnerable male-to dominate. Hurting girls relieves any anxiety that we may not be tough enough and establishes our heterosexual credentials. It's both a sign of our interest (we're paying attention to them) and a symbol of our difference (we're in control). The Unspoken Contract Invariably it comes as a surprise to us that women don't meekly accept our violence. So we respond by minimizing and justifying our actions: I didn't mean it. You're too sensitive. That's the way guys are. It was just the heat of the moment. Getting
men to take responsibility To get men to reflect on their experiences
and behaviors, we use exercises we call "stand ups." We ask everyone
to be silent, and then slowly pose a series of questions or statements, and ask
men to stand every time one applies to them. For example, we may ask, Have you
ever: Later in the workshop we ask, Have you ever: o interrupted a woman by talking louder? o made a comment in public about a woman's body? o discussed a woman's body with another man? o been told by a woman that she wanted more affection and less sex from you? o used your voice or body to intimidate a woman? o hit, slapped, shoved, or pushed a woman? o had sex with a woman when you knew she didn't want to? Each participant is asked to look around and see other men standing, which helps break down their sense of isolation and feelings of shame. Since we are not a therapy group, no one is questioned or confronted about his own experiences. All of our work involves challenging the notion that males are naturally abusive and that females are natural targets of male abuse. We give boys and men a way of analyzing social roles by drawing insights from their own experiences, and help them to recognize that social interactions involve making choices, that we can break free of old roles by supporting each other in choosing alternatives to violence. Power
and Violence There are growing numbers of men who are critical of sexism. All too often they are isolated and fearful of raising their concerns with other men because they worry about being targeted for violence. We try to help them break through the fear and reach out to other men. But we also work to get men to understand how they are damaged by sexism and how male violence against women keeps us from the collective action needed to confront racial, gender-based, and economic injustice. For
us personally this is powerful, life-changing work. We were each drawn to it because
of troubling issues in our own lives: issues around our relationships with our
fathers (one emotionally abusive, the other emotionally distant); relationships
with women partners where we found ourselves repeating controlling, sexist behaviors
that made us feel guilty, ashamed, defensive; and the fear that we might do to
our children what had been done to us as children. Through the work we have discovered
that many men share these concerns, but they are hesitant to talk about this with
other men. Sadly, we have all learned that "real" men don't admit vulnerability.
But despite their initial hesitation, many men are eager to talk about their lives,
and to change the controlling and abusive behavior they've been trained to pass
on. Doing this work is healing for us and for those we work with. Personal
Reflection Exercise #12 Update - Oliveira, M. A. D. S., Estrela, F. M., Silva, A. F. D., Magalhães, J. R. F., Gomes, N. P., Pereira, Á., Sousa, A. R., & Cruz, M. A. D. (2022). Perception of men perpetrators of violence about paternity. Revista brasileira de enfermagem, 75(4), e20210890. https://doi.org/10.1590/0034-7167-2021-0890
QUESTION
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