Gendering the Boy Scouts: Examining Hegemonic Masculinity at a Co-Ed Backpacking Camp

Masculinity has been studied in various outdoor settings, including the industries of ecotourism, outdoor education, and forestry. However, few studies have examined how physical space contributes to the construction of hegemonic masculinity in organizations associated with nature and the outdoors....

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Main Author: Samantha Pentecost
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dalhousie University Libraries 2020-10-01
Series:The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ojs.library.dal.ca/JUE/article/view/10350
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spelling doaj-e7acb444e0f644529d53510bfd48fe122021-08-02T23:49:12ZengDalhousie University LibrariesThe Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography2369-87212020-10-0110232010.15273/jue.v10i2.103509529Gendering the Boy Scouts: Examining Hegemonic Masculinity at a Co-Ed Backpacking CampSamantha Pentecost0Southwestern UniversityMasculinity has been studied in various outdoor settings, including the industries of ecotourism, outdoor education, and forestry. However, few studies have examined how physical space contributes to the construction of hegemonic masculinity in organizations associated with nature and the outdoors. This study relies on nine in-depth interviews conducted with outdoor educators and sixteen hours of ethnographic research completed at Mountain View Scout Camp, a backpacking program for youth operated by the Boy Scouts of America. Findings indicate that Mountain View is gendered both through its organizational aesthetics, which valorize a hegemonically masculine ideal, and via sta members’ conception of nature as feminine and forestry work and tools as masculine. Results also suggest that men employed at Mountain View will occasionally embody a hybrid masculine gender performance by utilizing non-hegemonic traits of masculinity such as pro-feminist ideas. However, these episodic masculine performances also serve to subtly reproduce gender inequalities by accepting only a speci c type of woman and rewarding men for super cial allyship.https://ojs.library.dal.ca/JUE/article/view/10350hegemonic masculinityhybrid masculinityorganizational aestheticsforestryoutdoor education
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Samantha Pentecost
spellingShingle Samantha Pentecost
Gendering the Boy Scouts: Examining Hegemonic Masculinity at a Co-Ed Backpacking Camp
The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography
hegemonic masculinity
hybrid masculinity
organizational aesthetics
forestry
outdoor education
author_facet Samantha Pentecost
author_sort Samantha Pentecost
title Gendering the Boy Scouts: Examining Hegemonic Masculinity at a Co-Ed Backpacking Camp
title_short Gendering the Boy Scouts: Examining Hegemonic Masculinity at a Co-Ed Backpacking Camp
title_full Gendering the Boy Scouts: Examining Hegemonic Masculinity at a Co-Ed Backpacking Camp
title_fullStr Gendering the Boy Scouts: Examining Hegemonic Masculinity at a Co-Ed Backpacking Camp
title_full_unstemmed Gendering the Boy Scouts: Examining Hegemonic Masculinity at a Co-Ed Backpacking Camp
title_sort gendering the boy scouts: examining hegemonic masculinity at a co-ed backpacking camp
publisher Dalhousie University Libraries
series The Journal for Undergraduate Ethnography
issn 2369-8721
publishDate 2020-10-01
description Masculinity has been studied in various outdoor settings, including the industries of ecotourism, outdoor education, and forestry. However, few studies have examined how physical space contributes to the construction of hegemonic masculinity in organizations associated with nature and the outdoors. This study relies on nine in-depth interviews conducted with outdoor educators and sixteen hours of ethnographic research completed at Mountain View Scout Camp, a backpacking program for youth operated by the Boy Scouts of America. Findings indicate that Mountain View is gendered both through its organizational aesthetics, which valorize a hegemonically masculine ideal, and via sta members’ conception of nature as feminine and forestry work and tools as masculine. Results also suggest that men employed at Mountain View will occasionally embody a hybrid masculine gender performance by utilizing non-hegemonic traits of masculinity such as pro-feminist ideas. However, these episodic masculine performances also serve to subtly reproduce gender inequalities by accepting only a speci c type of woman and rewarding men for super cial allyship.
topic hegemonic masculinity
hybrid masculinity
organizational aesthetics
forestry
outdoor education
url https://ojs.library.dal.ca/JUE/article/view/10350
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