Chapter 1: | Introduction |
Pleck’s view was that the Masculine Sex Role Identity (MSRI) paradigm has dominated the scientific and popular conceptions of sex roles since the 1930s and has been taken for granted. His sex role strain paradigm asserts that modern gender roles are contradictory and inconsistent and that there is no unifying structure for a monolithic gender role identity. In fact, pressuring males into a stereotypical male identity invites dysfunctionality and other psychological consequences. “The MSRI paradigm has helped to generate sex role strain,” Pleck concluded (p. 160). He wrote,
The Myth of Masculinity sounded the clarion call for the reexamination of masculine gender roles in every aspect of male life and identity. The unexamined ideology of patriarchal masculinity that defined men, as well as women and the institutions that nurtured them, came under attack by the scholars of the feminist movement (Kimmel and Messner, 2004).
By the 1970s, there had been a tremendous growth in women’s studies programs, advocating a new model for the study of gender and rejecting the traditional assumption that masculinity was the norm by which both males and females were measured (Kimmel and Messner, 2004). Against this backdrop, the so-called “men’s movement” emerged. Just as women began questioning their gender stereotyping, men started asking similar questions about masculine stereotypes. Erving Goffman (1963) made the following observation about an overarching, monolithic American male gender ideal: