Sunday, January 29, 2023

Rural toxic masculinity

As we watched Beyonce's CMA performance with the Dixie Chicks, I repeatedly thought about toxic masculinity. While the song Daddy's Lessons progressed, "Daddy's advice" ranged from "shoot," "don't cry," and simply but tellingly, "be strong." The lyrics made me think of men's propensity for violence and bottling up of emotions. But at the time, I was unsure how to relate these ideas to rural lives. 


While thinking about how masculinity affects rural lives, I stumbled upon an exciting article on this question. While discussing Nina Simones's rural upbringing, the author Leah Hampton posits a very revealing thought experiment. Leah suggests closing your eyes and imagining a rural city. 


When I engaged with this question, I almost exclusively thought of dry dirt roads, plotted farmland, and big trucks. 


Leah then begs the question, when imagining rural landscapes, "Are there women in your mind, seated at pianos, playing jazz? Are there any women at all?" She further asks, when imagining the rural land, did you think of any greenery? "does the rural terrain roll and teem? Do the animals and trees live in symbiosis?" Or, like me, did you imagine only dirt roads and barren lands? 


With her thought experiment, Leah posits that culturally, we associate rural lands with places that radiate and perpetuate toxic masculinity. This rural-masculine association is echoed in Professor Pruitt's Gender Geography & Rural Justice. 


This cultural perception of toxic masculinity and its perpetuation leads to a wide array of gendered disparities. For starters, when men are consumed by masculinity, they see themselves as entitled to certain respect and submission, particularly from women. This entitlement leads to feelings of possessiveness that have consistently turned into violence against women and empowerment over them. 


A masculinity study from 2021 on over 17,000 men found that men in rural communities are more likely to have such feelings of possessiveness over women. This increase in possessiveness is likely related to increased intimate partner violence, where rural women report higher levels of intimate partner violence than women living in urban areas. Further, intimate partner violence in rural areas is recorded as more severe, and rural women also have less access to life-saving resources because of rural landscape's spacing and isolation. 


The statistics are grim, and sadly, it should be kept in mind that this violence often goes underreported. 


Unhealthy expressions of masculinity also deeply affect the men that adhere to them. The same 2021 masculinity student found it is less socially acceptable for rural men to be "softer" or express their feelings of depression, anxiety, or general emotions. 


This social pressure on men to not be perceived as soft leads to repression, negatively affecting men's mental health. As reported by the CDC, men are four times more likely to attempt suicide than women. The rates of suicide, however, are even higher for rural men.  


Finally, it is also interesting to consider how the association between masculinity and rural America shapes our perceptions. Does our inclination towards masculinizing rural America lead us to believe rural America is strong enough to handle its problems on its own? What else might we be inclined to think when we associate rural America with conservative toxic masculinity? 

4 comments:

Rooney deButts said...

Your discussion of how toxic masculinity fosters an inability to healthily express emotions, perpetuates poor mental health, and contributes to violence, made me think about America’s gun violence epidemic (discussed recently on this blog). Specifically, I am reminded of the fact that virtually every mass shooter in U.S. history has been a man. If 98% of mass shootings were being committed by girls and women, gender would be at the forefront of national discussions on gun violence. Yet, mass shootings being perpetrated by boys and men at these rates has become so normalized, the massively gendered component of these tragedies seems to evade appropriate scrutiny. Investigating the relationship between toxic masculinity, mental health and violence is definitely important - thank you for starting this conversation!

Sarina Mugino said...

This post really hit home for me. My entire life, any and all advice from my family was along the lines of, "what doesn't kill you makes you stronger," "pull yourself up by your bootstraps," and even those encouraging you to be kind included a sentiment of strength (have thick skin and a soft heart). As someone who grew up without a father, I wouldn't have ever imagined a tie to toxic masculinity, as these phrases were all given to me by women. Thinking back, however, all of the "he's mean to you because he likes you," "boys will be boys," and "lighten up, it's just a joke" type phrases that are oh so common and familiar do really perpetuate this. I wonder if it is in part due to the "toughness" required to live in these areas? Most everyone I know started working for a family business at an elementary age, and either continued so throughout high school or got a job at another local business. I remember spending my 15th birthday applying for jobs and driving 30 minutes each way to my to work 40 hour weeks throughout high school. This work culture is heavily imbedded in many rural communities, and doesn't afford anyone mental health days. Obviously, this isn't ideal, nor would I wish my employment history on anyone, but I think it's an important thing to keep in mind when analyzing some of the rural mindset. Additionally, although the suggestion of violence is hardly ever the answer, it was somewhat empowering to me that men in many rural communities expected women to take care of themselves. The whole defend yourself and be tough premise, to me, made me feel like an equal person, and not like a piece of property that needed to be taken care of by a man. On the other side of this though, I do see how both ideologies are kinda messed up.

Katarina Mitrovic said...

This fascinating topic got me thinking about the connection between rurality and political affiliation. Oftentimes, the more rural an area, the more likely it is to lean right. Within the right, especially those who support more extreme right-wing politicians such as Trump, there is a general acceptance of toxic masculinity as not toxic but normal, even traditional: a kind of warrior mindset, as French and Illing stated in a Vox article on the topic. So now I am wondering, which is the cause and the effect? Is rurality causing toxic masculinity or vice versa? Or is this all just correlative? To me, it seems more likely that Republicans simply co-opted the idea of masculinity in an effort to win over specific populations. Where they take it is another issue on its own. I think it's possible that without goading by political candidates and news pundits, this level of toxic masculinity would not exist in rural areas: whether that be because people are not being fed ideas about the "dehumanization" of men by the "taking away" of their masculinity or because they wouldn't be as rage-oriented overall if they were not swarmed all day by outrageous news stories. As enumerated in your post, the toxicity level seems hard to reach without other factors pushing it along.

https://www.vox.com/vox-conversations-podcast/22834353/vox-conversations-david-french-republican-party-trump-masculinity

https://www.npr.org/2020/10/28/928336749/trump-has-weaponized-masculinity-as-president-heres-why-it-matters

https://www.foxnews.com/media/lefts-equity-push-deeply-demoralized-men-consequences-huge-douglas-murray

Unknown said...

I really enjoyed your blog! I am left wondering how to break people out of cages that I am not sure they know they’re trapped in. I do not want to sound paternalistic, but my guess is that when something like toxic masculinity is so embedded in the culture of a community, there may be a long road to freedom. Even in academia, which is stereotypically considered more “progressive” toxic masculinity is pervasive and only slightly more covert. I wonder how we realistically combat toxic notions of masculinity with limited mental health resources and ideological differences that affirm the supremacy of traditional masculinity. I want softness for everyone, should they so desire. And I hope we get there!