Society: Men, masculinity, and mental health
About halfway through the second series of Tina Fey’s charming Netflix show “The Four Seasons”, one of the protagonists, 40-something Jack, is on the beach, deep in conversation with a new male friend. The two are talking about the grief of profound personal loss—close friends, parents. Sprawled on deck chairs some distance away, the rest of Jack’s group watches with bemused curiosity. “What are those two dipshits talking about?” asks one, a gay man, turning to Jack’s wife. They play out a bro-dude mini-sketch, all bass voices and exaggerated shrugs: “Oh I just bought whiskey-flavoured body wash,” intones the wife. “I’m gonna wash my taint with it,” grunts her companion. “Men do sound exactly like this,” giggles a third member of the mocking party. The real and imagined exchanges capture heterosexual masculinity’s current predicament. A traditional conception, in which male vulnerability is concealed beneath a gruff bravado and banter, is (very) slowly receding. A new, embryonic one in which men can be vulnerable with each other is emerging. This uncharted space is being fought over by everybody from empathetic feminists to misogynists who weaponise vulnerability to reassert gender dominance.
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