Keywords
Acting, GQ, Gender roles, Hegemony, Magazines, Masculinity, Maxim, Playboy, Sexism, Stuff
Abstract
Men are bombarded with contradictory masculine imagery in the media. The perfect man must be aggressive but not violent, sensitive but not emotional, healthy, active and smart without being an idealist, overachiever or too bookish. Heterocentric male focused lifestyle magazines rival women’s magazines in number and availability. Some men look to these images as a tool by which to gauge their masculinity and learn their social role performance. This inquiry includes a content analysis of four major men's lifestyle magazines over a 12-month period in which four new masculinities: certitude, irony, new sexism and double voicing were critiqued. Elements of costume, nonverbal expressions and activity level in the photographs of men and women were examined. The findings indicate that Maxim and Stuff were deluged with displays of certitude of gender roles, irony, "new sexism" and double voicing. Playboy had a high level of gender certitude, marginal levels of new sexism and irony and low levels of double voicing. Lastly, GQ had relatively high levels of gender certitude but it had very low levels of the other masculinities.
Notes
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Graduation Date
2004
Semester
Summer
Advisor
Wright, Earl
Degree
Master of Arts (M.A.)
College
College of Arts and Sciences
Department
Sociology and Anthropology
Degree Program
Sociology and Anthropology
Format
application/pdf
Identifier
CFE0000119
URL
http://purl.fcla.edu/fcla/etd/CFE0000119
Language
English
Release Date
August 2004
Length of Campus-only Access
None
Access Status
Masters Thesis (Open Access)
Subjects
Arts and Sciences -- Dissertations, Academic; Dissertations, Academic -- Arts and Sciences
STARS Citation
Elmore, Ashley Michelle, "The New Man And The New Lad: Hegemonic Masculinities In Men's Lifestyle Magazines" (2004). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 24.
https://stars.library.ucf.edu/etd/24