Editor's note: I was looking for an old e-mail from someone, and found this thing that I wrote in 2006. While you would not be surprised to find that I did not treat the subject with any gravitas, what is interesting is that I utterly failed to anticipate that the men's movement would morph into something much darker and angrier.
Even funnier, I have had more than ten PSA (Prostate Specific Antigen) tests since then. Turns out that pretty much every male in my family gets prostate cancer, and you gotta stay on top of that.
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If you are a guy reading this, let me ask you something: How
much do you know about feminism? Ever read any books about it? Given it a good
thinking over? Discussed it with other guys? If you answered ‘no’ to these
questions, then good; there are many more important issues that us men need to
spend our intellectual power resolving.*
Also, if you answered no, I’m going to take a guess that you
didn’t know that back in the late eighties, there arose in the United States
and Canada
a splinter movement from the mainstream men’s movement of the time. I hear your
questions. You’re asking, “What
mainstream men’s movement?” Ah. That would be the men’s movement that arose in
response to ascension of feminism in the seventies.
The early proponents of “masculism” and “men’s rights”
were--and there is no nice way to say this--a big bunch of pantywaists. They
were so concerned with the rise of feminism and feminist identity, that nobody
would pay attention to the poor oppressed men-folk. Here are some of the
injustices they were worried about:
- Portrayal
of violence against women as more consequential than other forms of
violence
- Men
sometimes get charged with rape and sexual harassment when there is only
the word of the victim against that of the accused
- Since
conscription was only applied to males, they were the ones forced to risk
their lives in military service
- Medical
research funding for breast cancer is consistently higher than that for
prostate cancer, yet the fatality rate is roughly the same for both types
- Male
reproductive rights
Just so we are all clear on the above points, yes, these
guys got upset that only men were drafted and killed in wars, even though it’s
men who have all the political power and start
all the damn wars in the first place! And prostate cancer? Not only should
men not be concerned with this, but I don’t think guys have any business
knowing what or where a prostate is. I sure don’t.** And male reproductive
rights? Ha ha ha.
So, while we can ignore the mainstream men’s movement as
being comprised of clueless goons, let’s get back to that splinter movement. It
was called the Mythopoetic Men’s Movement, and was based largely on the works
of mythologist Joseph Campbell and poet Robert Bly. If you are not familiar
with the word “mythopoetic”, don’t worry. It is a made-up word coined in the
eighties. It relates to the creating and maintaining of living myths, and how
myths influence identity.
What kind of myths? Let’s kick a couple of examples around:
Warrior. Father. Leader. Husband. I hear your protests. You are most likely
saying that these are not myths, they are simply roles that men play. But more
than that, they are the original models of identity (some people would call
them “archetypes”, but we won’t because that’s a snobby sounding word), and the
concepts they represent come with fifty thousand years of psychological and
social baggage. Baggage that we as men do not always deal with real well,
because introspection and self-awareness are not integral of any of these
myths.
The Mythopoetic Men’s Movement asked some pretty serious
questions about male roles, took them apart, and put them back together again
with some unexpected additions. Male bonding was a primary feature, and it
involved a lot more than hanging out with other guys, getting drunk, and
watching football. This bonding included storytelling and rituals, and
re-established what it meant to be a man in the modern world. An important
ritual it tried to bring back was the rite of passage. Many cultures have such
rites, such as the Bar-Mitzvah or the confirmation. These religious
rites signified a coming of age in ancient times, but nobody today considers a
thirteen year-old a man. So, what other ceremonies do we have today that do
signify achieving manhood? High-school graduation? Joining the military? To
fill this disjunction, the mythopoetic man borrowed from ancient European and
Native American mythology, and new rituals and ceremonies were created to mark
and celebrate the coming of age.
Another key issue for these new men was what they called
‘reclaiming fathers’. At meetings and get-togethers, participants would
introduce themselves like, “I am ______, son of _______.” Although this sounds
kind of archaic and Viking-like (in fact all of those Scandinavian surnames
like Ericson, Robertson, etc. are derived from exactly this kind of naming
tradition), the idea in bringing back this convention was to tie men’s identity
more strongly to that of their male ancestors. Who you are was not to be decided by their jobs, nationality or
religion, but by the credo that you are your father’s son, and the father
to your children. I think this would be seen as unnecessary in a lot of
cultures, where there is a strong tribal and clan identity, or even here in Taiwan , where
the veneration of ancestors is a daily part of life. Surely those
ancestor-altars in people’s homes do a pretty good job of reminding men here of
their patriarchal lineage and their place in it.
So far, nothing in this new men’s movement seems
particularly bizarre. For men to get together and re-define the roles and
definitions of what it means to be a man is perfectly reasonable. But there is
a good example of why we are talking about this movement in the (mostly) past
tense: Drumming. Part-therapy, part male bonding, and part “releasing the wild
man within”, bands of men took to the forests, removed their shirts, and
started pounding away their aggressions together. And what was essentially a
support group, turned into something distinctly weirder.
Robert Bly wrote: "The Wild Man encourages a trust of
the lower half of our body, our genitals, our legs and ankles, our
inadequacies, the "soles" of our feet, the animal ancestors, the
earth itself.…" Now I don’t know about the rest of you guys, but while
drumming may indeed have a therapeutic and cathartic affect, common sense tells
me that doing it shirtless and in the company of other men, all the while trusting
my genitals may not be the wisest approach to finding myself. Besides, when
women hear talk of ‘releasing the wild man’, their reaction is almost always
going to be negative. Most women have seen enough of the ‘Wild Man’ in their
lives. And so, the Mythopoetic Men’s Movement faded away to the fringe.
Now, nearly two decades later, the questions that this
movement asked remain largely unanswered. When do we become men? How do we
connect as males without the crutches of sports and alcohol? When and how can
we show vulnerability? And what the heck is the concept of ‘warrior’ supposed
to mean to men today?
I can’t answer these questions, but I am pretty sure of one
thing. If Kirk was the captain, then the Enterprise
would win.
* Like who would win in a battle between an Imperial Battle
Cruiser and the U.S.S. Enterprise?
** The legal department of the Taichung Voice would like to
recommend that all readers age 50 and above talk to your doctor about prostate
cancer screening.
1 comment:
"Know this, son of Coul."
http://www.imdb.com/title/tt0800369/quotes/qt1487943?mavIsAdult=false
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