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June 10, 2009

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"...being a man has more to do with testosterone and imparting good values to his children than with having a traditional career..."

Oh my that's nicely put, Dana. The way out of the masculinity trap is realizing that pretty much all other "what it means to be a man" gender messages attempt to define men in terms of *limits* on how we can act, think, or be. Which only slightly hypothetically would terminate with the ideal man standing stiff on a plinth whispering through gritted teeth "I must maintain this rigid position or all is lost."

Discovering that *everything* one does as a man is masculine, instead of only those things one's grandfather was permitted, is extraordinarily empowering. Which only sounds ominous until one notices just how much that is unpleasant about men originates in our fear of being deemed "unmanly."

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Minor quibble: I think "During Recession, Reimagining the American Male" works well as alliteration. But attempting to live up to what we *imagine* the American male was (and, more often, wasn't) in the first place has been a big part of the problem all along.

Getting that "...being a man has more to do with testosterone and imparting good values to his children than with having a traditional career..." is the first critical step towards *un-imagining* being a man. And therefore towards actually starting to be one.

Cool post, Dana. Thank you.

figleaf

Do you think risk, instability and narcissism are more appealing to men than women? I liked the piece, but that line struck me as incongruent with its message; a logical fallacy. To some degree, all business embraces risk and narcissism (i.e. branding). Why imply this is unique or more desirable to males or that correlation, if one actually existed on these attributes, implies causation at all?

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