Hegemonic Masculinity and the Possibility of Change in Gender Relations

TitleHegemonic Masculinity and the Possibility of Change in Gender Relations
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsDuncanson, Claire
JournalMen and Masculinities
Volume18
Issue2
Pagination231-248
Date Published06/2015
Abstract

Hegemonic masculinity was introduced as a concept which, due to its understanding of gender as dynamic and relational, and of power as consent, could explain both the persistence of male power and the potential for social change. Yet, when hegemonic masculinity is applied in empirical cases, it is most often used to demonstrate the way in which hegemonic masculinity shifts and adopts new practices in order to enable some men to retain power over others. This is especially so in feminist International Relations, particularly studies of military masculinities, where shifts toward “softer” military masculinities such as the “tough and tender” soldier-scholar demonstrate to many feminists merely the “flexibility of the machinery of rule.” In this article, the author challenges the pessimism of these accounts of military masculinity. The author's particular contribution is to build on an emergent and underdeveloped strand of Connell’s work on hegemonic masculinity: how change might be theorized. She argues that hegemonic masculinity remains a useful concept, but that the process through which “hegemony may fail” requires rethinking. She makes this argument by exploring and working through empirical material on military masculinities, drawing on both my own research and critical analysis of the literature.

URLhttp://jmm.sagepub.com/content/early/2015/05/11/1097184X15584912.abstract
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