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Saturday, May 18 2013 @ 04:19 AM CDT

Masculinity Is Not Revolutionary

Feminism

Revolutionaries of many types maintain that resistance by any means necessary is required to stop momentous social injustice and environmental degradation. These activists recognize that those in power are the enemy and that the enemy will stop at nothing unless forced to do otherwise. Following this understanding, militancy is understood to be appropriate given the situation.

Masculinity Is Not Revolutionary

http://kidcutbank.blogspot.com/2012/07/masculinity-is-not-revolutionary.html

Revolutionaries of many types maintain that resistance by any means necessary is required to stop momentous social injustice and environmental degradation. These activists recognize that those in power are the enemy and that the enemy will stop at nothing unless forced to do otherwise. Following this understanding, militancy is understood to be appropriate given the situation.

Applied appropriately, militancy is an approach to activism that pledges a steadfast dedication to physically intervene, when necessary, in the violation of living beings and the destruction of communities. This militancy is often rooted in healthy communal norms and an allegiance to the bodily integrity of all beings.

Applied inappropriately, militancy is a reinforcement of men’s machismo. It’s a too easy jump given the hallmark militarized psychology and violation imperative of masculinity. To learn more about why militancy is applied inappropriately, we have to talk about gender.

Gender serves the purpose of arranging power between human beings based on their sex, categorizing them as feminine or masculine. In the succinct words of author and anti-porn activist Gail Dines, femininity can be characterized as an attitude of fuck me, while masculinity is an attitude of fuck you.

To be masculine, “to be a man,” says writer Robert Jensen in his phenomenal book, Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity, “…is a bad trade. When we become men—when we accept the idea that there is something called masculinity to which we could conform—we exchange those aspects of ourselves that make life worth living for an endless struggle for power that, in the end, is illusory and destructive not only to others but to ourselves.”1 Masculinity’s destructiveness manifests in men’s violence against women and men’s violence against the world. Feminist writer and activist Lierre Keith notes, “Men become ‘real men’ by breaking boundaries, whether it’s the sexual boundaries of women, the cultural boundaries of other peoples, the political boundaries of other nations, the genetic boundaries of species, the biological boundaries of living communities, or the physical boundaries of the atom itself.”2

Too often, politically radical communities or subcultures that, in most cases, rigorously challenge the legitimacy of systems of power, somehow can’t find room in their analysis for the system of gender. Beyond that, many of these groups actively embrace male domination—patriarchy, the ruling religion of the dominant culture—though they may not say this forthright, with claims of “anti-sexism.” Or sexism may simply not ever be a topic of conversation at all. Either way, male privilege goes unchallenged, while public celebrations of the sadism and boundary-breaking inherent in masculinity remain the norm.

This framework allows men the rebellious “fuck you” to be aimed not only at those who run the system, but anyone in their vicinity who has boundaries to be broken, power to be struggled for. It should be obvious that acting by any means necessary for justice is not the same as breaking boundaries of those you perceive as enemies, which, in the case of masculinity, means most everyone.

But, it’s not obvious. Thus, a group of male self-proclaimed radicals I once knew could tape a picture of a local woman who disagreed with their politics to the inside of a toilet bowl. Thus, levels of rape are increasing forest-defense camps and punk music scenes. Thus, most men in the culture continue to consume extremely debasing pornography and attempt to practice that type of sex on women in their lives. By any means necessary, to these men, ends with a particular sadistic self-fulfillment, one that is fueled by dangerous self-hatred.

Given that most militant groups have taken this type of approach as a given, we must actively work to combat it in favor of a real politics of justice. The answer is feminism, which Andrea Dworkin defines as a war on masculinity.

Alongside challenging systems of power such as racism, capitalism, and civilization, we need to learn to challenge male supremacy as well, including when it is found within facets of our activism.

This is especially important in direct confrontations with power. Says Lierre Keith: “[W]e need to examine calls for violence through a feminist lens critical of norms of masculinity. Many militant groups are an excuse for men to wallow in the cheap thrill of the male ego unleashed from social constraints through bigger and better firepower: real men use guns.”3

To begin to reject this mentality, radical men should practice stepping aside while women assume roles in leadership. Masculinity needs challenging, which men must do themselves. However, men also need to learn to listen more, taking direction from the women around them and learning to be better allies. The world cannot handle any more broken boundaries; men have breached so many already, be they communal, biotic, or personal. We need a real culture of resistance, which includes an appropriate militancy. And, if anyone should be armed, it’s feminists.

1. Jensen, Robert. Getting Off: Pornography and the End of Masculinity, p. 5.

2. Keith, Lierre. “Why We Are Feminists: The Feminist Framework of DGR,” Deep Green Resistance movement Frequently Asked Questions page, http://www.deepgreenresistance.org/faq/dgr-a-feminist-organization/

3. Keith, McBay, and Jensen. Deep Green Resistance: Strategy to Save the Planet, p. 75.

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Masculinity Is Not Revolutionary | 6 comments | Create New Account
The following comments are owned by whomever posted them. This site is not responsible for what they say.
Masculinity Is Not Revolutionary
Authored by: Pomegranate on Friday, July 27 2012 @ 03:55 PM CDT

So, I'm only masculine if I break boundaries and objectify women for my own pleasure? If revolutionaries must eschew masculinity, what does revolution based on femininity look like? 

 

 

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When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.


Masculinity Is Not Revolutionary
Authored by: WorkerFreedom on Friday, July 27 2012 @ 05:02 PM CDT

 Niether masculinty or feminty is revolutionsry but ether won can be or completly being nuetral. You should not have to be anything be yourself as long as you don't try to degade anyone else, there is a diifrence between bing mocho and being masculin.

Masculinity Is Not Revolutionary
Authored by: Pomegranate on Friday, July 27 2012 @ 10:18 PM CDT

I don't see why the author believes that masculinity and misogyny are the same thing.

 

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When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.


Masculinity Is Not Revolutionary
Authored by: Jonathan on Saturday, July 28 2012 @ 12:07 AM CDT

So, the only way for men to express masculinity is to degrade women and commit random acts of violence? As men, we must acept, I'm not really sure, either ambiguous gender (everything's all bender-wender gendy, he he!) of some sort (but not, obviously, masculinity- bendy-wendy has its limits), or 'feminity' (which would probably collapse under the bendy-wendy please don't gender me analysis). You know, no boundaries or definitions, except the ones the 'right people' like. Everything's fluid and ambiguous, yada yada, except when it isn't. And let's face it, actually it's not: the author knows what 'masculinity' is (bad bad bad!), and knows what men should be (feminine something or another good good good!). That masculinity- even within the definition of boundary-pushing- could be something quite healthy, liberatory, and non-violent (though without ruling out some forms of 'violence,' whether of sport, or, yes, possible militancy in the right circumstances, unless you want to see how absolute pacificism works out for you), well, that thought need not occur. The author has a tight little plan and vision, and everyone outside of it, is going to radical anarchist-type metaphorical hell.

I could go on, but it would just make me more depressed and would not be productive.

Masculinity Is Not Revolutionary
Authored by: Pomegranate on Saturday, July 28 2012 @ 01:16 AM CDT

I sort of read into this a critique of "violent anarchists" as part of the occupy movement. IE, those of you who destroy property or confront the cops are not only counter-productive and anti-revolutionary, but are actually misogynistic.

Perhaps I am misunderstanding.

 

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When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro.


Masculinity Is Not Revolutionary
Authored by: ArchStanton on Saturday, July 28 2012 @ 01:21 PM CDT

Women who seek to be equal with men lack ambition.

--Timothy Leary