| Literature DB >> 34844458 |
Sandra Connor1, Kristina Edvardsson2, Christopher Fisher3, Evelien Spelten4.
Abstract
The social construct of masculinity evolves in response to changes in society and culture. Orthodox masculinity is mostly considered to be hegemonic and is evidenced by the dominance of men over women and other, less powerful men. Contemporary shifts in masculinity have seen an emergence of new masculinities that challenge traditional male stereotypes. This systematic review aims to review and synthesize the existing empirical research on contemporary masculinities and to conceptualize how they are understood and interpreted by men themselves. A literature search was undertaken on 10 databases using terms regularly used to identify various contemporary masculinities. Analysis of the 33 included studies identified four key elements that are evident in men's descriptions of contemporary masculinity. These four elements, (a) Inclusivity, (b) Emotional Intimacy, (c) Physicality, and (d) Resistance, are consistent with the literature describing contemporary masculinities, including Hybrid Masculinities and Inclusive Masculinity Theory. The synthesized findings indicate that young, middle-class, heterosexual men in Western cultures, while still demonstrating some traditional masculinity norms, appear to be adopting some aspects of contemporary masculinities. The theories of hybrid and inclusive masculinity suggest these types of masculinities have several benefits for both men and society in general.Entities:
Keywords: inclusive masculinity; masculinity; new masculinity; social change
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34844458 PMCID: PMC8674484 DOI: 10.1177/15579883211061009
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Mens Health ISSN: 1557-9883
Figure 1.PRISMA Flow Chart.
Summary of Studies.
| Author | Country and setting | Study aim | Study design/methods | Identified masculinity | Sample size | Population | Themes | Quality rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| North East America | Identify existence of more inclusive versions of masculinity | Ethnography | Metrosexual | 21 | 18- to 22-year-old | Decreased levels of homophobia | 10/10
|
|
| USA College | To examine the construction of masculinity among college-age heterosexual male cheerleaders | Qualitative | Orthodox masculinity | 68 | 18- to 23-year-old | Rejection of orthodox masculinity | 7/10
|
|
| USA University | To identify how masculinity is constructed in the setting of university cheerleading | Ethnography | Inclusive masculinity | 32 | 18- to 23-year-old males | Rejection of homophobia, misogyny | 9/10
|
|
| Mid-West America | Investigate relationship b/w antifemininity, homophobia & the construction of masculinity in this setting | Ethnography | Inclusive masculinity | 22 | 18- to 22-year-old males | Decreased levels of homophobia | 10/10
|
|
| England | To Identify Inclusive Masculinity in a sport education setting | Ethnography | Inclusive masculinity | 16 | Sixth form males | Absence of homophobia | 9/10
|
|
| British university | To examine forms of homosocial intimacy among heterosexual
males | Qualitative | Inclusive masculinity | 40 | 18- to 19-year-old males | Decreased levels of homophobia | 8/10
|
|
| England | To examine how this cohort, construct their masculinity in opposition to many aspects of orthodox masculinity. | Ethnography | Inclusive masculinity | 24 | 18- to 22-year-old males | Rejection/contestation of misogyny
&homophobia | 10/10
|
|
| USA | To understand the frequency, context and meanings of same-sex kissing | Mixed method study | Inclusive masculinity | 442 | 18- to 25-year-old males | Decreased levels of homophobia | 8/10
|
|
| England | To examine the social dynamics of masculinities in 6th form college in a small town in the northeast of England | Ethnography | Inclusive Masculinity | 15 | Working class 16- to 19-year-old boys | Positive attitudes toward homosexuality | 10/10
|
|
| Norway | Explores how the masculine identities of employed fathers may be affected by caring. | Qualitative | Caring Masculinity | 12 | Fathers who used their entire quota of parental leave to care for child home alone on a full-time basis | Rejection of traditional gender roles | 9/10
|
|
| Australia Body Positivity for Guys (Online Blog) | To analyze the complex ways that men construct, represent and perform masculinity on a men’s body-positivity Tumblr blog called Body Positivity for Guys. | Instrumental case study collection of visual and textual data from BPfG | Hegemonic Masculinity &Inclusive Masculinity | Male or masculine-identifying BPfG members | Acceptance of diversity, sexuality, race,
gender | 8/10
| |
|
| Australia | To examine if the cultural shift in homosocial intimacy is evident among Australian undergraduate men. | Qualitative Questionnaire | Inclusive Masculinity | 90 | Heterosexual undergraduate men | Decreased levels of homophobia | 8/10
|
|
| USA -online | To examine how the McElroy brothers are exemplars of how nerds, queer, contemporary masculinity discourse | Qualitative | Nerd masculinity | 41 episodes | McElroy brothers—2 podcasts | Rejection of traditional masculinity norms | 8/10
|
|
| UK | A psychosocial exploration of the identificatory positionings that are apparent in men’s talk of becoming first-time fathers. | Qualitative | Traditional & New masculinity | 30 | Heterosexual men aged between 18 and 40 | Rejection of traditional fatherhood role and
norms | 7/10
|
|
| USA | Examines how men juggle two contrasting cultural models of
masculinity when fathering through | Ethnography | Orthodox Masculinity | 30 | Heterosexual families | Caring | 7/10
|
| Greenebaum & Dexter (2018) | USA | This research explores how 20 vegan men explain veganism in relation to patriarchal, hegemonic masculinity. | Grounded theory interviews | Hybrid Masculinity | 20 | Males 21–76 years old | Rejection of sexist attitudes and traditional masculine
stereotypes | 7/10
|
|
| UK | To study an internet forum, using membership categorization analysis (Sacks 1972; 1992) to investigate the deployment of metrosexuality and related identity categories. | Membership Categorization Analysis (MCA) | Metrosexuality | Forum members, identifying as male | Rejecting traditional masculine norms | 8/10
| |
|
| UK | Investigates men’s responses to contemporary sociocultural transformations in masculinity and fatherhood, and revised expectations of them as fathers. | Qualitative Semi-structured Interviews | Traditional Masculinity | 30 | Men aged 18–35 | Putting children first | 7/10 |
|
| UK | To explore the relationship between straight men joining gay teams in a context of changing masculinities | Qualitative Interviews | New masculinities | 12 | Diverse range of self-identified straight men living in the UK, | Shifting attitudes toward homosexuality | 7/10
|
|
| Iceland | To explore young men’s perceptions of new masculinities | Qualitative Semi-structured interviews | New & Inclusive Masculinity | 9 | Males 18–25 years old (no children) | Dissatisfaction with restrictions imposed by traditional
masculinity norms | 7/10
|
|
| Sweden | To explore how men, think, communicate and reason on fatherhood and parenthood | Qualitative | New masculinities | 4 | Men who split paternity leave with their spouse | Rejection of traditional fatherhood role/gender
roles | 7/10
|
|
| USA | To examine stay at home fathers lived experiences through the perspective of the theory of caring masculinities | Grounded Theory | Caring masculinity | 25 | Stay at Home fathers | Rejecting traditional masculinity/gender roles | 7/10
|
|
| England | To explore if men described as exhibiting inclusive
masculinities at university continue | Qualitative Semi-structured interviews | Inclusive Masculinity | 10 | Men, now aged 28–31, who participated in a previous study by Anderson, E (2009) | Emotional intimacy | 8/10
|
|
| UK | Examines how boys’ masculinities are predicated in opposition to the orthodox values of homophobia, misogyny, and aggressiveness. | Ethnography | Inclusive masculinity theory | 12 | 16- to 18-year-old males in school | Rejection of homophobia, misogyny and
aggression | 10/10
|
|
| UK | Examines the emergence of progressive attitudes toward homosexuality among working-class boys in a sixth form in the south of England | Ethnography | Inclusive masculinity theory | 10 | Males in 6th form at a school in working class area | Decreased levels of homophobia | 9/10
|
|
| USA | To describe and explicate modern adolescents
gendered | Ethnography | Inclusive masculinity theory | 10 | 16–17-year-old males | Absence of homophobia | 9/10
|
|
| Britain | To examine how (these) young men developed and exhibit their inclusive masculinities an attitude’s which we postulate are a reflection of dominant youth culture | Qualitative | Inclusive Masculinity | Britain’s top 4 male vloggers | Rejection of traditional masculinity norms | 7/10
| |
|
| USA | Examines how privileged young men in Western TBS program for substance abuse construct hybrid masculinities to navigate masculinity dilemmas that arise in the therapeutic context | Ethnography | Hybrid Masculinity | 34 | School alumni and staff who were 18 or older | Distancing from traditional hegemony | 10/10
|
|
| England | To examine data from a qualitative, longitudinal study of English young men’s negotiation and performance of masculinity during their transitions to adulthood. | Digital
Ethnography | Inclusive masculinity theory | 24 | 18–24-year-old males | Rejection of traditional masculinity norms | 8/10
|
|
| England | To investigate the performances and understandings of masculinity in relation to decreasing homo-hysteria. | Ethnography | Inclusive masculinity theory | 22 | Elite level soccer players | Decreased levels of homophobia | 7/10
|
|
| UK university | The present study provides the first known qualitative examination of heterosexual undergraduate men’s conceptualization and experiences of the bromance, outside research on cinematic representations | Qualitative | Inclusive masculinity theory | 30 | Undergraduate men enrolled in 4 undergraduate sport-degree
programs at one university in the UK | Decreased levels of homophobia | 10/10
|
|
| Britain | To determine if heterosexual men’s online identities encompassed a more inclusive style of masculinity, compared with previously dominant orthodox constructions. | Qualitative | Inclusive Masculinity | 44 | Heterosexual, white, males 18–20 years old attending university sports course | homosocial tactility, dancing with and kissing other
men | 8/10
|
|
| UK | To establish how PE teachers, understand and construct masculinities within the educational environment. | Qualitative | Inclusive masculinity theory | 17 | English male PE teachers | Emotionally open | 7/10
|
JBI Critical appraisal checklist for Qualitative research score.
JBI Critical appraisal checklist for Prevalence score.
Recurring Elements, Concepts, and Global Themes.
| Recurring elements | Concepts | Global themes |
|---|---|---|
| Decreased levels of homophobia | Acceptance of differing sexualities | Inclusivity |
| Acceptance of gender diversity | Acceptance of differing genders | |
| Respect for women | Acceptance of women | |
| Sensitive of others | Acceptance of differing races | |
| Emotional bonding | Emotional bonding | Emotional Intimacy |
| Increased emotional support between
friends | Emotional openness | |
| Developing intimate
relationships | Emotional growth | |
| Hugging | Intentional physical contact | Physicality |
| Increasing physical tactile | Adoption of physical intimacy | |
| Dancing with men | Open displays of physical connectedness | |
| Metrosexual | Hybrid masculinities | Resistance |
| Rejection of orthodox masculinities | Rejection of traditional/orthodox masculinity | |
| Decrease in hyper-masculine behavior | Rejection of traditional masculine stereotypes | |
| Caring and connecting | Rejection of traditional masculine norms |