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Journal ArticleDOI

Hybrid Masculinities: New Directions in the Sociology of Men and Masculinities

TLDR
The concept of hybrid masculinities was coined by Demetriou as mentioned in this paper to describe men's selective incorporation of performances and identity elements associated with marginalized and subordinated masculinity and femininities.
Abstract
Hybrid masculinity refers to men’s selective incorporation of performances and identity elementsassociated with marginalized and subordinated masculinities and femininities. We use recent theoriza-tion of hybrid masculinities to critically review theory and research that seeks to make sense of con-temporary transformations in masculinity. We suggest that research broadly supports three distinctconsequences associated with recent changes in performances and politics of masculinity that workto obscure the tenacity of gendered inequality. Hybrid masculinities (i) symbolically distance menfrom hegemonic masculinity; (ii) situate the masculinities available to young, White, heterosexualmen as somehow less meaningful than the masculinities associated with various marginalized andsubordinated Others; and (iii) fortify existing social and symbolic boundaries in ways that often workto conceal systems of power and inequality in historically new ways. IntroductionAgrowingbodyofsociologicaltheoryandresearchonmenandmasculinitiesaddressesrecenttransformations in men’s behaviors, appearances, opinions, and more. While historical re-searchhasshownmasculinitiestobeinacontinuousstateofchange(e.g.,Kimmel1996;Segal1990), the extent of contemporary transformations as well as their impact and meaning is thesource of a great deal of theory, research, and debate. While not a term universally adoptedamong masculinities scholars, the concept of “hybrid masculinities” is a useful way to makesense of this growing body of scholarship. It critically highlights this body of work that seeksto account for the emergence and consequences of recent transformations in masculinities.The term “hybrid” was coined in the natural sciences during the 19th century. Initiallyused to refer to species produced through the mixing of two separate species, by the 20thcentury, it was applied to people and social groups to address popular concern with miscege-nation. Today, scholars in the social sciences and humanities use “hybrid” to address culturalmiscegenation – processes and practices of cultural interpenetration (Burke 2009). “Hybridmasculinities” refer to the selective incorporation of elements of identity typically associatedwith various marginalized and subordinated masculinities and – at times – femininities intoprivileged men’s gender performances and identities (e.g., Arxer 2011; Demetriou 2001;Messerschmidt 2010; Messner 2007). Work on hybrid masculinities has primarily, thoughnot universally, focused on young, White, heterosexual-identified men. This research is cen-trally concerned with the ways that men are increasingly incorporating elements of various“Others” into their identity projects. While it is true that gendered meanings change histor-ically and geographically, research and theory addressing hybrid masculinities are beginningto ask whether recent transformations point in a new, more liberating direction.The transformations addressed by this literature include men’s assimilation of “bits andpieces”(Demetriou2001:350)ofidentityprojectscodedas“gay”(e.g.,Bridges,forthcoming;

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Citations
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‘So Kuoↄ Kye Bϵ Yi’: disrupting constructions of masculinities among the Dagaaba of Northwestern Ghana

TL;DR: The authors presented an African-centered framework on how researchers interested in critical studies on African men and masculinities might think through and think from Africa in a critical study on men and women.
Journal ArticleDOI

“Oh take some man-up pills”: A life-history study of muscles, masculinity, and the threat of injury

TL;DR: The authors explored the life-histories of 10wt training men and aimed to understand the role muscularity played in their masculine identities and their responses to experiences (e.g., injury) that threaten their muscular masculinity.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the Marriageability of Men

TL;DR: The marriageability of men is an argument used in sociological research to understand demographic changes in marriage and to analyze social dynamics associated with gender, race, class, family, workplace, incarceration, and more as discussed by the authors.
Journal ArticleDOI

¿Nuevas o viejas masculinidades?: El rol masculino dominante entre los adolescentes españoles

TL;DR: In this paper, a qualitative methodology based on focus groups and semi-structured interviews with adolescents that are in the last courses of secondary education was used to determine to what extent the gender role of boys that have been grown and have been educated in a supposedly more egalitarian society, have changed.
Journal ArticleDOI

Wayward Elites: From Social Reproduction to Social Restoration in a Therapeutic Boarding School:

TL;DR: In the past few decades, a multi-billion-dollar "therapeutic boarding school" industry has emerged largely for America's troubled upper-class youth as discussed by the authors, and the experiences of privile...
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Hegemonic Masculinity Rethinking the Concept

TL;DR: The concept of hegemonic masculinity has influenced gender studies across many academic fields but has also attracted serious criticism as mentioned in this paper, and the authors trace the origin of the concept in a convergence of ideas and map the ways it was applied when research on men and masculinities expanded.
Book

White Supremacy and Racism in the Post-Civil Rights Era

TL;DR: The post-civil rights racial structure in the U.S. as mentioned in this paper has been described as a "New Racism": Color-Blind Racism and Blacks, and the post-Civil Rights Racial Structure in the United States is called New Racism, New Theory, and New Struggle.
Book

Love and Theft: Blackface Minstrelsy and the American Working Class

Eric Lott
TL;DR: The 20th-anniversary edition of "The Blackening of America: Popular Culture and National Cultures" by Greil Marcus as mentioned in this paper was the first publication of the book.
Journal ArticleDOI

Connell's concept of hegemonic masculinity : A critique

TL;DR: In this article, a detailed theoretical exposition of the concept of hegemonic masculinity is presented and a case study of the contribution of gay masculinities to the formation of the contemporary hegaemonic bloc is presented.