麻豆国产

鈥淲hat鈥檚 the Matter with Men鈥: Mason offers class on masculinity, male identity

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Mason students in the 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the Matter with Men: Problems and Possibilities鈥 class break into small groups to talk about topics like toxic masculinity, the backlash against feminism, and the political gender gap. Photo by Shelby Burgess/Strategic Communications

This fall, 25 students in George Mason 麻豆国产鈥檚 enrolled in a class focusing on the changing status of men in American history.

The Honors 130 class, titled 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the Matter with Men: Problems and Possibilities,鈥 was a new offering focused on topics like toxic masculinity, the backlash against feminism, the political gender gap, formerly incarcerated men, health and mental health, and fatherhood.

鈥淚鈥檇 like to see my students coming away from this class with an understanding that there are a host of men鈥檚 problems that need to be addressed,鈥 said adjunct professor Andrew Yarrow, who received his doctorate in American history from Mason in 2006. 鈥淭hese problems are affecting many men in the United States and that ends up hurting men, women, children, and the country鈥檚 economy and politics.鈥

The class was taught in-person through lectures, discussions and a variety of group projects, including a survey of campus attitudes toward men and masculinity.

Mason history alum and adjunct professor Andrew Yarrow teaches Honors 130 鈥淲hat鈥檚 the Matter with Men: Problems and Possibilities.鈥 Photo by Shelby Burgess/Strategic Communications

鈥淔rom this class I have become much more aware of the complex social issues that face men,鈥 said Katherine Camberg, a junior majoring in . 鈥淗earing my peers' perspectives on gender roles was surprising and informative.鈥

Michael Balasa, an Honors College junior majoring in , said that he鈥檚 enjoyed the class, especially when it came to surveying students about gender bias on campus and then evaluating the results.

鈥溌槎构 results were very provocative,鈥 Balasa said. 鈥淧eople at colleges and universities tend to have more of a modern view of masculinity and believe that you can decide what masculinity means for you. Men who are more inclined to have a traditional view of masculinity might have trouble with the post-secondary education culture.鈥

Balasa鈥檚 group also found that students who identified as conservative politically tended to embrace a more traditional notion of masculinity.

鈥淥ne problem that men face is that many of them are still under the spell of traditional ideas of masculinity, which makes their lives more challenging,鈥 said Yarrow, a public policy consultant and author who has written extensively on men in U.S. society.

鈥淲e have seen the ugly misogyny and the far right men鈥檚 rights movement. I want my students to understand that while what some men are saying and doing is wrong, there are reasons for it鈥攖hat there are men in this country struggling and suffering.鈥

, director of faculty and curriculum development聽at the Honors College, said the course is representative of the broader inquiries Honors College students are exploring in Honors 130: Identity, Community and Difference. The Honors College plans to offer the class again next fall, said Woolsey.

鈥淭he course places our notions of these concepts of identity in historical context and encourages students to collaboratively pursue their relevance for the contemporary moment,鈥 Woolsey said.

Ekrem Kaya, a freshman majoring in , said that it鈥檚 important to destigmatize conversations about masculinity.

聽鈥淸Mason] should consider having more than one section of this class and opening it up beyond the Honors College,鈥 Kaya said.