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{{Use American English|date=July 2023}} | |||
'''Male Privilege''' is a ] used to describe what is, in the view of those using the term, both the extent to which ''patriachalism'' manifests itself through rights and privileges that are exclusive to the male gender, and the mechanisms that exist for equalising the genders. Those who use the term claim male privilege is an aspect of the more general considerations of power structures within societies and it examines | |||
{{Use mdy dates|date=July 2023}} | |||
{{Short description|Social privilege of men}} | |||
{{pp-semi-indef|small=yes}} | |||
{{Feminism sidebar|concepts}} | |||
{{Discrimination sidebar|Related}} | |||
'''Male privilege''' is the system of advantages or rights that are available to ] on the basis of their ]. A man's access to these benefits may vary depending on how closely they match their society's ]. | |||
==Three contributors to the debate== | |||
===Simone de Beauvoir=== | |||
In ''The Second Sex'' (1949), ] traces the development of patriarchal oppression through written and spoken historical, literary, and mythical sources, examining how women have been affected by the systematic representation of the male as a positive norm. She found that the female is almost always described as the ''Other''. This repetition and reinforcement through all forms of ] commonly leads to a loss of social and personal identity, and a form of alienation unique to the experience of women. | |||
Academic studies of male privilege were a focus of ] scholarship during the 1970s. These studies began by examining barriers to ] between the sexes. In later decades, researchers began to focus on the ] and overlapping nature of privileges relating to sex, ], ], ], and other forms of social classification. | |||
===Michael Foucault=== | |||
In the ''Archaeology of Knowledge'' (1969), ] argued that an understanding of communities and their history can only emerge through a questioning of the assumptions and classifications that we use to describe knowledge. Only if we challenge the rules that have been developed to validate the truth of what we have been told, can the secret histories emerge. Before his death, he completed three volumes of ''The History of Sexuality'', the first becoming a classic, which examine the roles of ''power'' and ''knowledge'' in controlling behaviour between the sexes. | |||
== |
== Overview == | ||
In ''The Female Eunuch'' (1970), ] explained how the differences between the sexes have been exaggerated and how sex roles are learned, not natural. She argued that both sexes deform their behaviour in order to conform to socially given gender roles. | |||
Special privileges and status are granted to males in ] societies.<ref name="Phillips & Phillips">{{cite book |last1=Phillips |first1=Debby A. |last2=Phillips |first2=John R. |editor1-first=Jodi |editor1-last=O'Brien |title=Encyclopedia of Gender and Society: Volume 2 |year=2009 |publisher=SAGE Publications |location=Thousand Oaks, Calif. |isbn= 978-1-4129-0916-7 |pages= 683–685 |chapter=Privilege, Male |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=_nyHS4WyUKEC&pg=PT735}}</ref><ref name="Keith">{{cite book |last1=Keith |first1=Thomas |title=Masculinities in Contemporary American Culture: An Intersectional Approach to the Complexities and Challenges of Male Identity |date=2017 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-31-759534-2 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=r_niDQAAQBAJ&pg=PT29 |chapter=Patriarchy, Male Privilege, and the Consequences of Living in a Patriarchal Society |language=en}}</ref> These are societies defined by ], in which males hold primary power and predominate in roles of political leadership, moral authority, ] and control of property. With systemic subordination of women, males gain economic, political, social, educational, and practical advantages that are more or less unavailable to women.{{refn|name=Keith}} The long-standing and unquestioned nature of such patriarchal systems, reinforced over generations, tends to make privilege invisible to holders; it can lead males who benefit from such privilege to ascribe their special status to their own individual merits and achievements, rather than to unearned advantages.{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} | |||
==The question== | |||
In every aspect of modern life in politics, the law, the churches, the business world, the schools, the universities, and the family, the issue of gender discrimination has grown in significance. The core assumption is that sexuality and sexual behaviour are not natural outcomes, forced on individuals by the reality of their genetics or biology. Instead sexuality is said to be a social construction, i.e. men and women are nurtured and encouraged through peer pressure to become what the majority considers appropriate members of the ambient society. These assigned gender roles carry with them packages of rights and duties, and these packages are often different depending on whether the individual is male or female. The question increasing asked is whether one gender is a victim of unfair treatment and, if so, what remedies should exist to redress the balance. | |||
In the field of ], male privilege is seen as embedded in the structure of social institutions, as when men are often assigned authority over women in the workforce, and benefit from women's traditional caretaking role.<ref name="Rohlinger">{{cite book |last=Rohlinger |first=Deana A. |editor1-last=Ritzer |editor1-first=G. |editor2-last=Ryan |editor2-first=J.M. |title=The Concise Encyclopedia of Sociology |date=2010 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |isbn=9781444392647 |pages=473–474 |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Dz4wU64f_JYC&q=%22male+privilege%22 |chapter=Privilege}}</ref> Privileges can be classified as either ''positive'' or ''negative'', depending on how they affect the rest of society.{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} Women's studies scholar ] writes: {{quote|We might at least start by distinguishing between positive advantages that we can work to spread, to the point where they are not advantages at all but simply part of the normal civic and social fabric, and negative types of advantage that unless rejected will always reinforce our present hierarchies.<ref name="McIntosh">{{cite web |last1=McIntosh |first1=Peggy |title=White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences Through Work in Women's Studies |url=http://www.ehcounseling.com/materials/WHITE_PRIVILEGE_MALE_04-02-2003.pdf |publisher=Wellesley College, Center for Research on Women |location=Wellesley, MA |date=1988 |id=Working Paper 189}}</ref>}} | |||
==The issues== | |||
The way in which sexuality is defined is said to create a regime of power, i.e. the power of religious, legal, and other expert discourses to regulate social behaviour and control access to sexuality. Foucault argued that all power relations are formed where differences can be shown to exist in a real sense or where differences can be created. It is convenient that biological sexual differentiation is usually clear. The definition of sexuality is less clear because it involves making judgements as to social acceptability across the spectrum of sexual behaviour. The main body of research shows that the discourses have labelled the different forms of sexuality so as to inflate the value of some manifestations and devalue others. Hence, within the Churches, a power relationship is created between the clergy and the congregation which must confront and confess sins such as lust and fornication, and seek expiation from a forgiving enforcer of morality. A similar relationship has arisen between the psychoanalyst and the patient who must expose sexual motives and beliefs to critique by an ''expert''. The institution of marriage, and therefore access to sexual relationships which avoid the stigma of sin or immorality, is regulated by formal laws, as are some other forms of sexuality. Such laws represent the judgement of social acceptability by the groups which control the law-making and policing functions within the society. It has therefore been difficult to raise issues of male privilege until societies became honest enough to admit both its existence and its possible unfairness. | |||
Some negative advantages accompanying male privilege include such things as the expectation that a man will have a better chance than a comparably qualified woman of being hired for a job, as well as being paid more than a woman for the same job.{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} | |||
In 2005, the Geneva-based World Economic Forum published a study titled, ''Women's Empowerment: Measuring the Gender Gap'', measuring the extent to which women have achieved full equality with men in five critical areas: | |||
*economic participation; | |||
*economic opportunity; | |||
*political empowerment; | |||
*educational attainment; and | |||
*health and well-being. | |||
It then ranks countries according to the advancement of their female populations. The top ten countries are as follows: | |||
#Sweden | |||
#Norway | |||
#Iceland | |||
#Denmark | |||
#Finland | |||
#New Zealand | |||
#Canada | |||
#U.K. | |||
#Germany | |||
#Australia | |||
== |
==Scope== | ||
The term "male privilege" does not apply to a solitary occurrence of the use of power, but rather describes one of many systemic power structures that are interdependent and interlinked throughout societies and cultures.<ref name="Narayan">{{cite book|last=Narayan|first=Uma|title=Dislocating Cultures: Identities, Traditions, and Third-World Feminism.|year=1997|publisher=London: Routledge|isbn=978-0-415-91419-2}}</ref> | |||
Many ] and supranational law-making bodies have enacted formal anti-discrimination laws. These laws seek to prevent discrimination based on race, sex (including sexual orientation), religion, national origin, physical disability, and age in a range of different social situations. In other words, sexuality is only one of the many ways in which power relationships may be used to justify differential treatment. But the fact that laws exist does not mean an end to discriminations. Rather, the introduction of any law is the admission of a failure to persuade the majority of those involved to implement the requested changes, and an acknowledgement that only the use of state-sanctioned force will correct behaviour. | |||
Privilege is not shared equally by all males. Those who most closely match an ideal masculine norm benefit the most from privilege.{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}}{{refn|name=Coston & Kimmel}} In Western patriarchal societies this ideal has been described as being "white, heterosexual, stoic, wealthy, strong, tough, competitive, and autonomous".{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} ] scholars refer to this ideal masculine norm as '']''. While essentially all males benefit from privilege to some degree, those who visibly differ from the norm may not benefit fully in certain situations, especially in the company of other men that more closely match it.{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} | |||
Even when laws exist, there is the problem of obtaining a remedy. Many who are the victims of discrimination fear the process of litigation and the social consequences for challenging the ''status quo''. Then there is the problem of interpretation by judiciaries which may be reluctant to condemn certain well-established practices. Further, even when some cases are successful, this does not necessarily lead to a general shfft in behaviour. Because sexuality has a deeper social significance than many of the other classifications of discrimination, the enforcement of sex discrimination laws is highly controversial in many countries where ''machismo'' or other forms of patriarchal norm are embedded in the national psyche. Effecting any change in such countries is difficult where critics are heard to assert that the potentially relevant elements of economic status, race, or social or cultural history in sexism are often belittled or ignored. Men's advocates say that sexism ultimately hurts every person in society, including men and that, in their zeal to brand all men as "beneficiaries" of sexism, women are simplistic in their judgements and just as prejudiced and biased as the men whom they claim are guilty of discrimination. | |||
Men who have experienced ] and ] in youth, in particular, may not accept the idea that they are beneficiaries of privilege. Such forms of coercive violence are linked to the idea of ''toxic masculinity'', a specific model of manhood that creates hierarchies of dominance in which some are favored and others are harmed.{{refn|name=Keith}} | |||
Then, of course, come the problems of whether laws should introduce positive discrimination to right past injustices. The argument may be crystalised as follows: if, for example, women have traditionally been barred from entering universities to study medicine, should a quota system be imposed on universities to guarantee a minimum percentage of women on all future courses? Assuming a finite number of places in a meritocratic system, the effect of such a law would be to exclude from medical study a number of otherwise well-qualified men. It is not their fault that past generations may have been privileged. They are now and they are being excluded not on merit, but because of a policy. The problem with this argument is that, if it were to be accepted at face value, there would never be a change of outcome. However, if discrimination is inherently wrongful, then it is wrongful whether it is positive or negative. So, although positive discrimination may be acceptable in the short term to prime the pump, the best answer is for the law to be simply and genuinely meritocratic and to require universities to admit only those students with the best qualifications. No-one can object if fair competition for places between the genders is the outcome because society will then get the best qualified doctors (assuming, of course, that the qualifying examinations produce unskewed results and that no non-academic criteria are allowed to bias admission should examination results be equal). | |||
The invisibility of male privilege can be seen for instance in discussions of the ]; the gap is usually referred to by stating women's earnings as a percentage of men's. However, using women's pay as the baseline highlights the dividend that males receive as greater earnings (32% in 2005).{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} In ], male dominance in the ownership and control of ] and other forms of wealth has produced disproportionate male influence over the ]es and the hiring and firing of employees. In addition, a disproportionate burden is placed upon women in employment when they are expected to be solely responsible for ]; they may be more likely to be fired or be denied advancement in their profession, thus putting them at an economic disadvantage relative to men.{{refn|name=Keith}} | |||
And that, of course, points to a key difficulty. Principles such as "equal pay for equal work" or "equal access to the membership of professions, trade bodies, associations and clubs", may be easily stated but can be extremely difficult to define with such certainty as to produce uniformity and predictability of outcome. Laws are crude brushstrokes. They can only address a few of the more obvious abuses where credible evidence is available, and the cost of using the courts system produces a worthwhile gain in society at large. But ''male privilege'' can exist as a right, advantage, exemption or immunity granted to or enjoyed by men in a vast number of informal and unregulated situations. It is any form of behaviour that encourages preferential treatment within a society and, therefore, completely beyond the scope of conventional formal legal reach. The only way to address any such discrimination is by education and this is a very long-term project for a society to undertake. | |||
== |
==Scholarship== | ||
http://www.weforum.org/site/homepublic.nsf/Content/Global Competitiveness Programme%5CWomen%27s Empowerment%3A Measuring the Global Gender Gap | |||
The earliest academic studies of privilege appeared with ] scholars' work in the area of ] during the 1970s. Such scholarship began by examining barriers to ] between the sexes. In later decades, researchers began to focus on the ] and overlapping nature of privileges relating to sex, ], ], ], and other forms of social classification.{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} | |||
] | |||
], one of the first feminist scholars to examine male privilege, wrote about both male privilege and ], using the metaphor of the "invisible knapsack" to describe a set of advantages borne, often unaware and unacknowledged, by members of privileged groups.{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} According to McIntosh, privilege is not a result of a concerted effort to oppress those of the opposite gender; however, the inherent benefits that men gain from the systemic bias put women at an innate disadvantage. The benefits of this unspoken privilege may be described as special provisions, tools, relationships, or various other opportunities. According to McIntosh, this privilege may actually negatively affect men's development as human beings, and few question that the existing structure of advantages may be challenged or changed.{{refn|name=McIntosh}} | |||
Efforts to examine the role of privilege in students' lives has become a regular feature of university education in North America.{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}}<ref name="Coston & Kimmel">{{cite journal |last1=Coston |first1=Bethany M. |last2=Kimmel |first2=Michael |year=2012 |title=Seeing Privilege Where It Isn't: Marginalized Masculinities and the Intersectionality of Privilege |journal=Journal of Social Issues |volume=68 |issue=1 |pages=97–111 |doi=10.1111/j.1540-4560.2011.01738.x |issn=1540-4560}}</ref> By drawing attention to the presence of privilege (including male, white, and other forms) in the lives of students, educators have sought to foster insights that can help students contribute to ].{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} Such efforts include McIntosh's "invisible knapsack" model of privilege and the "Male Privilege Checklist".{{refn|name=Coston & Kimmel}} | |||
Psychologist Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic proposes that incompetent men are disproportionately promoted into leadership positions because instead of testing rigorously for competence, employers are attracted to ], ], and ].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://ideas.ted.com/why-do-so-many-incompetent-men-become-leaders-and-what-can-we-do-about-it/ |title=Why do so many incompetent men become leaders? And what can we do about it? |date=January 9, 2020 |author=Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic}}</ref> | |||
==Cultural responses== | |||
Advocates for ] and ] as well as ] men often accept that men's traditional roles are damaging to males but deny they as a group still have institutional power and privilege, and argue that men in the 21st century are now victims relative to women.<ref name="Flood 2007 Men"/><ref>{{cite book |last=Clatterbaugh |first=K. |editor1-last=Flood |editor1-first=Michael |display-editors=etal |title=International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities |date=2007 |publisher=Routledge |location=London |isbn=978-0-415-33343-6 |chapter=Anti-feminism |chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=jh7y6ELc90YC&pg=PA21 |pages=21–}}</ref> | |||
Some have taken active roles in challenging oppressive ] and ], arguing that male privilege is deeply linked to the oppression of women. They describe men's oppressive behaviors as cultural traits learned within patriarchal social systems, rather than inborn biological traits.{{refn|name=Phillips & Phillips}} Advocates within the broader ] oriented towards ] or anti-sexism argue that traditional ]s harm both men and women. "Liberal" profeminism tends to stress the ways men suffer from these traditional roles, while more "radical" profeminism tends to emphasize male privilege and ].<ref name="Flood 2007 Men">{{cite book |last=Flood |first=Michael |author-link=Michael Flood |editor1-last=Flood |editor1-first=Michael |display-editors=etal |title=International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities |date=2007 |publisher=Routledge |location=London |isbn=978-0-415-33343-6 |chapter=Men's movement |chapter-url=http://www.xyonline.net/sites/default/files/Flood%2C%20Men%27s%20Movements%2C%20IEMM%202007.pdf |pages=418–422 |access-date=October 19, 2013 |archive-date=May 17, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130517124222/http://www.xyonline.net/sites/default/files/Flood%2C%20Men%27s%20Movements%2C%20IEMM%202007.pdf |url-status=dead }}</ref> Some men may also be advocates of women's rights but deny that their privilege as a whole is a part of the issue at hand.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Shaw|first1=Susan|last2=Lee|first2=Janet|title=Women's Voices Feminist Visions|date=2015|publisher=McGraw-Hill Education|location=New York, New York|isbn=978-0-07-802700-0|page=54|edition=Sixth}}</ref>{{POV statement|date=January 2019}} | |||
==Preference of sons over daughters== | |||
{{Main|Sex selection}} | |||
In both ] and ], male offspring are often favored over female children.<ref>{{Cite book |editor-last1= Ryju |editor-first1= S. |editor-last2= Lahiri-Dutt |title= Doing gender, doing geography: emerging research in India |location= New Delhi |publisher= Routledge |year= 2011 |page= 212 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EB63--z4zK0C&pg=PT212 |isbn= 978-0-415-59802-6}}</ref><ref name=weiner>{{Cite book |editor-last1= Weiner |editor-first1= M. |editor-last2= Varshney |editor-first2= A. |editor-last3= Almond |editor-first3= G. A. |title= India and the politics of developing countries |location= Thousand Oaks, Calif. |publisher= SAGE Publications |year= 2004 |page= 187 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=ls38Az4-J64C&pg=PA187 |isbn= 978-0-7619-3287-1 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |editor-last= Joseph |editor-first= W. A. |title= Politics in China: an introduction |location= Oxford |publisher= Oxford University Press |year= 2010 |page= 308 |url= https://books.google.com/books?id=kk80evDTZIYC&pg=PA308 |isbn= 978-0-19-533530-9 }}</ref><ref name=lai-wan>{{Cite journal |last1= Lai-wan |last2= Eric |first2= B. |last3= Hoi-yan |first1= C. C. |title= Attitudes to and practices regarding sex selection in China |journal= Prenatal Diagnosis |volume= 26 |issue= 7 |year= 2006 |pages= 610–613 |doi= 10.1002/pd.1477|pmid= 16856223 |s2cid= 222098473 }}</ref> Some manifestations of son preference and the devaluation of women are eliminating unwanted daughters through neglect, maltreatment, abandonment, as well as female ] and ] despite laws that prohibit infanticide and ]<ref name=lai-wan/><ref name=singh>{{Cite journal |url= http://www.frontline.in/static/html/fl2915/stories/20120810291502200.htm |title= Man's world, legally |last= Singh |first= K. |journal= ] |volume= 29 |issue= 15 |year= 2012 |access-date= May 13, 2013}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |editor-last1= Koop |editor-first1= C. E. |editor-link1= C. Everett Koop |editor-last2= Pearson |editor-first2= C. E. |editor-last3= Schwarz |editor-first3= M. R. |title= Critical issues in global health |location= San Francisco, Calif. |publisher= Wiley |year= 2002 |page= 224 |isbn= 978-0-7879-6377-4 |quote= Across the world, male privilege is also variously reflected in giving sons preferential access to health care, sex- selective abortion, female infanticide, or trafficking in women.}}</ref> In India some of these practices have contributed to skewed sex ratios in favor of male children at birth and in the first five years.<ref name=weiner/> Other examples of privileging male offspring are special "praying for a son" ceremonies during pregnancy, more ceremony and festivities following the birth of a boy, listing and introducing sons before daughters, and common felicitations that associate good fortune and well-being with the number of sons.<ref>{{Cite book |last= Croll |first= E. |title= Endangered daughters: discrimination and development in Asia |chapter= Ethnographic voices: disappointing daughters |chapter-url= https://books.google.com/books?id=npGRm5pNRl0C&pg=PA70 |location= London |publisher= Routledge |year= 2000 |pages= 70–105 |isbn= 978-0-203-17021-2}}</ref> | |||
Reasons given for preferring sons to daughters include sons' role in religious family rites, which daughters are not permitted to perform, and the belief that sons are permanent members of the birth family whereas daughters belong to their husband's family after marriage in accordance with ] tradition. Other reasons include ] customs whereby only sons can carry on the family name, the obligation to pay ] to a daughter's husband or his family, and the expectation that sons will support their birth parents financially while it is regarded as undesirable or shameful to receive financial support from daughters.<ref name=lai-wan/><ref name=singh/> | |||
==See also== | |||
{{colbegin}} | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
*] | |||
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{{colend}} | |||
==References== | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
==Further reading== | |||
* {{Cite journal | last = Branscombe | first = Nyla R. | title = Thinking about one's gender group's privileges or disadvantages: consequences for well-being in women and men | journal = British Journal of Social Psychology | volume = 37 | issue = 2 | pages = 167–184 | doi = 10.1111/j.2044-8309.1998.tb01163.x | date = June 1998 | pmid = 9639862 | url = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/13644510 }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last1 = Ferber | first1 = Marianne A. | last2 = Blau | first2 = Francine D. | last3 = Winkler | first3 = Anne E. | author-link1 = Marianne Ferber | author-link2 = Francine D. Blau | title = The economics of women, men, and work | publisher = Pearson | location = Boston | year = 2014 | edition = 7th | isbn = 9780132992817 }} | |||
* {{Cite book | last = Jacobs | first = Michael P. | chapter = Do gay men have a stake in male privilege? | editor-last1 = Gluckman | editor-first1 = Amy | editor-last2 = Reed | editor-first2 = Betsy | title = Homo economics: capitalism, community, and lesbian and gay life | pages = 165–184 | publisher = Routledge | location = New York | year = 1997 | isbn = 9780415913799 | chapter-url = https://books.google.com/books?id=ll-xBgAAQBAJ&pg=PA165 }} | |||
* {{Cite journal | last = Kimmel | first = Michael S. | author-link = Michael Kimmel | title = Men's responses to feminism at the turn of the century | journal = ] | volume = 1 | issue = 3 | pages = 261–283 | doi = 10.1177/089124387001003003 | jstor = 189564 | date = September 1987 | s2cid = 145428652 }} | |||
* {{Cite journal | last = Kolb | first = Kenneth H. | title = 'Supporting our black men': reproducing male privilege in a black student political organization |journal = Sociological Spectrum | volume = 27 | issue = 3 | pages = 257–274 | doi = 10.1080/02732170701206106 | date = 2007 | s2cid = 144812653 | url = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/238399712 }} | |||
* {{Cite book |editor1-last=Kimmel |editor1-first=Michael |editor2-last=Ferber |editor2-first=Abby L. |title=Privilege: A Reader |date=2003 |publisher=Westview Press |location=Boulder, Colorado |isbn=978-0-8133-4056-2}} | |||
* {{cite journal | last = Messner | first = Michael A. | author-link = Michael Messner | title = The limits of 'The Male Sex Role': an analysis of the men's liberation and men's rights movements' discourse | journal = ] | volume = 12 | issue = 3 | pages = 255–276 | doi = 10.1177/0891243298012003002 | jstor = 190285 | date = June 1998 | s2cid = 143890298 }} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last1= Noble |first1= Carolyn |last2= Pease |first2= Bob |title= Interrogating male privilege in the human services and social work education |journal= Women in Welfare Education |volume= 10 |issue= 1 |pages= 29–38 |date= 2011 |url= http://www.anzswwer.org/wiwe/default.htm |url-status= bot: unknown |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20170823085758/http://www.anzswwer.org/wiwe/default.htm |archive-date= August 23, 2017 }} | |||
* {{cite journal |last1=Orelus |first1=Pierre W. |title=Unmasking male, heterosexual, and racial privileges: from naive complicity to critical awareness and praxis |journal=Counterpoints |volume=351 |pages=17–62 |date=2010 |jstor = 42980551 }} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last1= Pratto |first1= Felicia |last2= Stewart |first2= Andrew L. |title= Group dominance and the half-blindness of privilege |journal= Journal of Social Issues |volume= 68 |issue= 1 |pages= 28–45 |doi= 10.1111/j.1540-4560.2011.01734.x | date = March 2012 }} | |||
* {{Cite journal |last1= Schmitt |first1= Michael T. |last2= Branscombe |first2= Nyla R. |title= The meaning and consequences of perceived discrimination in disadvantaged and privileged groups |journal= European Review of Social Psychology |volume= 12 |issue= 1 |pages= 167–199 | doi = 10.1080/14792772143000058 | date = 2002 |s2cid= 143953546 | url = https://www.researchgate.net/publication/233204900 }} | |||
{{Feminism}} | |||
{{Discrimination}} | |||
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Latest revision as of 09:43, 15 January 2025
Social privilege of men
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Discrimination |
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Male privilege is the system of advantages or rights that are available to men on the basis of their sex. A man's access to these benefits may vary depending on how closely they match their society's ideal masculine norm.
Academic studies of male privilege were a focus of feminist scholarship during the 1970s. These studies began by examining barriers to equity between the sexes. In later decades, researchers began to focus on the intersectionality and overlapping nature of privileges relating to sex, race, social class, sexual orientation, and other forms of social classification.
Overview
Special privileges and status are granted to males in patriarchal societies. These are societies defined by male supremacy, in which males hold primary power and predominate in roles of political leadership, moral authority, social privilege and control of property. With systemic subordination of women, males gain economic, political, social, educational, and practical advantages that are more or less unavailable to women. The long-standing and unquestioned nature of such patriarchal systems, reinforced over generations, tends to make privilege invisible to holders; it can lead males who benefit from such privilege to ascribe their special status to their own individual merits and achievements, rather than to unearned advantages.
In the field of sociology, male privilege is seen as embedded in the structure of social institutions, as when men are often assigned authority over women in the workforce, and benefit from women's traditional caretaking role. Privileges can be classified as either positive or negative, depending on how they affect the rest of society. Women's studies scholar Peggy McIntosh writes:
We might at least start by distinguishing between positive advantages that we can work to spread, to the point where they are not advantages at all but simply part of the normal civic and social fabric, and negative types of advantage that unless rejected will always reinforce our present hierarchies.
Some negative advantages accompanying male privilege include such things as the expectation that a man will have a better chance than a comparably qualified woman of being hired for a job, as well as being paid more than a woman for the same job.
Scope
The term "male privilege" does not apply to a solitary occurrence of the use of power, but rather describes one of many systemic power structures that are interdependent and interlinked throughout societies and cultures.
Privilege is not shared equally by all males. Those who most closely match an ideal masculine norm benefit the most from privilege. In Western patriarchal societies this ideal has been described as being "white, heterosexual, stoic, wealthy, strong, tough, competitive, and autonomous". Men's studies scholars refer to this ideal masculine norm as hegemonic masculinity. While essentially all males benefit from privilege to some degree, those who visibly differ from the norm may not benefit fully in certain situations, especially in the company of other men that more closely match it.
Men who have experienced bullying and domestic violence in youth, in particular, may not accept the idea that they are beneficiaries of privilege. Such forms of coercive violence are linked to the idea of toxic masculinity, a specific model of manhood that creates hierarchies of dominance in which some are favored and others are harmed.
The invisibility of male privilege can be seen for instance in discussions of the gender pay gap in the United States; the gap is usually referred to by stating women's earnings as a percentage of men's. However, using women's pay as the baseline highlights the dividend that males receive as greater earnings (32% in 2005). In commerce, male dominance in the ownership and control of financial capital and other forms of wealth has produced disproportionate male influence over the working classes and the hiring and firing of employees. In addition, a disproportionate burden is placed upon women in employment when they are expected to be solely responsible for child care; they may be more likely to be fired or be denied advancement in their profession, thus putting them at an economic disadvantage relative to men.
Scholarship
The earliest academic studies of privilege appeared with feminist scholars' work in the area of women's studies during the 1970s. Such scholarship began by examining barriers to equity between the sexes. In later decades, researchers began to focus on the intersectionality and overlapping nature of privileges relating to sex, race, social class, sexual orientation, and other forms of social classification.
Peggy McIntosh, one of the first feminist scholars to examine male privilege, wrote about both male privilege and white privilege, using the metaphor of the "invisible knapsack" to describe a set of advantages borne, often unaware and unacknowledged, by members of privileged groups. According to McIntosh, privilege is not a result of a concerted effort to oppress those of the opposite gender; however, the inherent benefits that men gain from the systemic bias put women at an innate disadvantage. The benefits of this unspoken privilege may be described as special provisions, tools, relationships, or various other opportunities. According to McIntosh, this privilege may actually negatively affect men's development as human beings, and few question that the existing structure of advantages may be challenged or changed.
Efforts to examine the role of privilege in students' lives has become a regular feature of university education in North America. By drawing attention to the presence of privilege (including male, white, and other forms) in the lives of students, educators have sought to foster insights that can help students contribute to social justice. Such efforts include McIntosh's "invisible knapsack" model of privilege and the "Male Privilege Checklist".
Psychologist Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic proposes that incompetent men are disproportionately promoted into leadership positions because instead of testing rigorously for competence, employers are attracted to confidence, charisma, and narcissism.
Cultural responses
Advocates for men's rights and father's rights as well as anti-feminist men often accept that men's traditional roles are damaging to males but deny they as a group still have institutional power and privilege, and argue that men in the 21st century are now victims relative to women.
Some have taken active roles in challenging oppressive sexism and misogyny, arguing that male privilege is deeply linked to the oppression of women. They describe men's oppressive behaviors as cultural traits learned within patriarchal social systems, rather than inborn biological traits. Advocates within the broader men's movement oriented towards profeminism or anti-sexism argue that traditional gender roles harm both men and women. "Liberal" profeminism tends to stress the ways men suffer from these traditional roles, while more "radical" profeminism tends to emphasize male privilege and sexual inequality. Some men may also be advocates of women's rights but deny that their privilege as a whole is a part of the issue at hand.
Preference of sons over daughters
Main article: Sex selectionIn both India and China, male offspring are often favored over female children. Some manifestations of son preference and the devaluation of women are eliminating unwanted daughters through neglect, maltreatment, abandonment, as well as female infanticide and feticide despite laws that prohibit infanticide and sex-selective pregnancy termination. In India some of these practices have contributed to skewed sex ratios in favor of male children at birth and in the first five years. Other examples of privileging male offspring are special "praying for a son" ceremonies during pregnancy, more ceremony and festivities following the birth of a boy, listing and introducing sons before daughters, and common felicitations that associate good fortune and well-being with the number of sons.
Reasons given for preferring sons to daughters include sons' role in religious family rites, which daughters are not permitted to perform, and the belief that sons are permanent members of the birth family whereas daughters belong to their husband's family after marriage in accordance with patrilocal tradition. Other reasons include patrilineal customs whereby only sons can carry on the family name, the obligation to pay dowry to a daughter's husband or his family, and the expectation that sons will support their birth parents financially while it is regarded as undesirable or shameful to receive financial support from daughters.
See also
- Androcentrism
- Anti-discrimination law
- Chauvinism
- Gender
- Gender marking in job titles
- Gender bias on Misplaced Pages
- Harem effect (science)
- Honorary male
- Generic antecedent
- Global Gender Gap Report
- Male as norm
References
- ^ Phillips, Debby A.; Phillips, John R. (2009). "Privilege, Male". In O'Brien, Jodi (ed.). Encyclopedia of Gender and Society: Volume 2. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications. pp. 683–685. ISBN 978-1-4129-0916-7.
- ^ Keith, Thomas (2017). "Patriarchy, Male Privilege, and the Consequences of Living in a Patriarchal Society". Masculinities in Contemporary American Culture: An Intersectional Approach to the Complexities and Challenges of Male Identity. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-31-759534-2.
- Rohlinger, Deana A. (2010). "Privilege". In Ritzer, G.; Ryan, J.M. (eds.). The Concise Encyclopedia of Sociology. John Wiley & Sons. pp. 473–474. ISBN 9781444392647.
- ^ McIntosh, Peggy (1988). "White Privilege and Male Privilege: A Personal Account of Coming to See Correspondences Through Work in Women's Studies" (PDF). Wellesley, MA: Wellesley College, Center for Research on Women. Working Paper 189.
- Narayan, Uma (1997). Dislocating Cultures: Identities, Traditions, and Third-World Feminism. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-91419-2.
- ^ Coston, Bethany M.; Kimmel, Michael (2012). "Seeing Privilege Where It Isn't: Marginalized Masculinities and the Intersectionality of Privilege". Journal of Social Issues. 68 (1): 97–111. doi:10.1111/j.1540-4560.2011.01738.x. ISSN 1540-4560.
- Tomas Chamorro-Premuzic (January 9, 2020). "Why do so many incompetent men become leaders? And what can we do about it?".
- ^ Flood, Michael (2007). "Men's movement" (PDF). In Flood, Michael; et al. (eds.). International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities. London: Routledge. pp. 418–422. ISBN 978-0-415-33343-6. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 17, 2013. Retrieved October 19, 2013.
- Clatterbaugh, K. (2007). "Anti-feminism". In Flood, Michael; et al. (eds.). International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities. London: Routledge. pp. 21–. ISBN 978-0-415-33343-6.
- Shaw, Susan; Lee, Janet (2015). Women's Voices Feminist Visions (Sixth ed.). New York, New York: McGraw-Hill Education. p. 54. ISBN 978-0-07-802700-0.
- Ryju, S.; Lahiri-Dutt, eds. (2011). Doing gender, doing geography: emerging research in India. New Delhi: Routledge. p. 212. ISBN 978-0-415-59802-6.
- ^ Weiner, M.; Varshney, A.; Almond, G. A., eds. (2004). India and the politics of developing countries. Thousand Oaks, Calif.: SAGE Publications. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-7619-3287-1.
- Joseph, W. A., ed. (2010). Politics in China: an introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 308. ISBN 978-0-19-533530-9.
- ^ Lai-wan, C. C.; Eric, B.; Hoi-yan (2006). "Attitudes to and practices regarding sex selection in China". Prenatal Diagnosis. 26 (7): 610–613. doi:10.1002/pd.1477. PMID 16856223. S2CID 222098473.
- ^ Singh, K. (2012). "Man's world, legally". Frontline. 29 (15). Retrieved May 13, 2013.
- Koop, C. E.; Pearson, C. E.; Schwarz, M. R., eds. (2002). Critical issues in global health. San Francisco, Calif.: Wiley. p. 224. ISBN 978-0-7879-6377-4.
Across the world, male privilege is also variously reflected in giving sons preferential access to health care, sex- selective abortion, female infanticide, or trafficking in women.
- Croll, E. (2000). "Ethnographic voices: disappointing daughters". Endangered daughters: discrimination and development in Asia. London: Routledge. pp. 70–105. ISBN 978-0-203-17021-2.
Further reading
- Branscombe, Nyla R. (June 1998). "Thinking about one's gender group's privileges or disadvantages: consequences for well-being in women and men". British Journal of Social Psychology. 37 (2): 167–184. doi:10.1111/j.2044-8309.1998.tb01163.x. PMID 9639862.
- Ferber, Marianne A.; Blau, Francine D.; Winkler, Anne E. (2014). The economics of women, men, and work (7th ed.). Boston: Pearson. ISBN 9780132992817.
- Jacobs, Michael P. (1997). "Do gay men have a stake in male privilege?". In Gluckman, Amy; Reed, Betsy (eds.). Homo economics: capitalism, community, and lesbian and gay life. New York: Routledge. pp. 165–184. ISBN 9780415913799.
- Kimmel, Michael S. (September 1987). "Men's responses to feminism at the turn of the century". Gender & Society. 1 (3): 261–283. doi:10.1177/089124387001003003. JSTOR 189564. S2CID 145428652.
- Kolb, Kenneth H. (2007). "'Supporting our black men': reproducing male privilege in a black student political organization". Sociological Spectrum. 27 (3): 257–274. doi:10.1080/02732170701206106. S2CID 144812653.
- Kimmel, Michael; Ferber, Abby L., eds. (2003). Privilege: A Reader. Boulder, Colorado: Westview Press. ISBN 978-0-8133-4056-2.
- Messner, Michael A. (June 1998). "The limits of 'The Male Sex Role': an analysis of the men's liberation and men's rights movements' discourse". Gender & Society. 12 (3): 255–276. doi:10.1177/0891243298012003002. JSTOR 190285. S2CID 143890298. Pdf.
- Noble, Carolyn; Pease, Bob (2011). "Interrogating male privilege in the human services and social work education". Women in Welfare Education. 10 (1): 29–38. Archived from the original on August 23, 2017.
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: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) Pdf. - Orelus, Pierre W. (2010). "Unmasking male, heterosexual, and racial privileges: from naive complicity to critical awareness and praxis". Counterpoints. 351: 17–62. JSTOR 42980551.
- Pratto, Felicia; Stewart, Andrew L. (March 2012). "Group dominance and the half-blindness of privilege". Journal of Social Issues. 68 (1): 28–45. doi:10.1111/j.1540-4560.2011.01734.x.
- Schmitt, Michael T.; Branscombe, Nyla R. (2002). "The meaning and consequences of perceived discrimination in disadvantaged and privileged groups". European Review of Social Psychology. 12 (1): 167–199. doi:10.1080/14792772143000058. S2CID 143953546.
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