"Just Shave It Off"

Introduction Head hair comprises a critical part of the male appearance ideal, which itself is a crucial signifier of a man’s masculinity. However, difficulties in recruitment have meant that research has not yet fully explored how men construct the loss of head hair (baldness), perhaps because it...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Glen Jankowski, Michael Sherwin, Nova Deighton-Smith, Beth T Bell
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Dougmar Publishing Group 2021-07-01
Series:International Journal of Men's Social and Community Health
Subjects:
men
Online Access:http://ijmsch.com/index.php/IJMSCH/article/view/55
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spelling doaj-f32e738e89a34ae88d4a64368aeafc622021-07-06T21:37:09ZengThe Dougmar Publishing GroupInternational Journal of Men's Social and Community Health2561-91792021-07-014110.22374/ijmsch.v4i1.55"Just Shave It Off"Glen Jankowski0Michael Sherwin1Nova Deighton-Smith2Beth T Bell3Leeds Beckett University, UKLeeds Beckett UniversityLeeds Beckett UniversityYork St John University Introduction Head hair comprises a critical part of the male appearance ideal, which itself is a crucial signifier of a man’s masculinity. However, difficulties in recruitment have meant that research has not yet fully explored how men construct the loss of head hair (baldness), perhaps because it is considered “feminine” to disclose body dissatisfaction experiences to a researcher or other people. Methods and Design Online forums provide an opportunity for the anonymous discussion of body dissatisfaction that may overcome this obstacle. The first 260 forums posts from the two most popular baldness forums were thematically analysed. Ethics Statement Institutional ethics approval was granted. Results and Discussion We identified three themes titled: (1) Baldness is an ugly and demasculinising condition, (2) Baldness is stigmatised by a superficial society and superficial women and (3) Resistance to baldness despair. Our findings show baldness distress, and stigma exist though so does resistance, which can be comforting to men experiencing baldness or any form of body dissatisfaction. Conclusion and Implications Online forums are a salient resource to enhance our understanding of men’s balding concerns and disclosure barriers. Independent, professional and effective baldness support that unpacks baldness masculinised and medicalised framing is recommended. http://ijmsch.com/index.php/IJMSCH/article/view/55menbody dissatisfactionbaldnessexperimentforum analysismixed-methods
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Glen Jankowski
Michael Sherwin
Nova Deighton-Smith
Beth T Bell
spellingShingle Glen Jankowski
Michael Sherwin
Nova Deighton-Smith
Beth T Bell
"Just Shave It Off"
International Journal of Men's Social and Community Health
men
body dissatisfaction
baldness
experiment
forum analysis
mixed-methods
author_facet Glen Jankowski
Michael Sherwin
Nova Deighton-Smith
Beth T Bell
author_sort Glen Jankowski
title "Just Shave It Off"
title_short "Just Shave It Off"
title_full "Just Shave It Off"
title_fullStr "Just Shave It Off"
title_full_unstemmed "Just Shave It Off"
title_sort "just shave it off"
publisher The Dougmar Publishing Group
series International Journal of Men's Social and Community Health
issn 2561-9179
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Introduction Head hair comprises a critical part of the male appearance ideal, which itself is a crucial signifier of a man’s masculinity. However, difficulties in recruitment have meant that research has not yet fully explored how men construct the loss of head hair (baldness), perhaps because it is considered “feminine” to disclose body dissatisfaction experiences to a researcher or other people. Methods and Design Online forums provide an opportunity for the anonymous discussion of body dissatisfaction that may overcome this obstacle. The first 260 forums posts from the two most popular baldness forums were thematically analysed. Ethics Statement Institutional ethics approval was granted. Results and Discussion We identified three themes titled: (1) Baldness is an ugly and demasculinising condition, (2) Baldness is stigmatised by a superficial society and superficial women and (3) Resistance to baldness despair. Our findings show baldness distress, and stigma exist though so does resistance, which can be comforting to men experiencing baldness or any form of body dissatisfaction. Conclusion and Implications Online forums are a salient resource to enhance our understanding of men’s balding concerns and disclosure barriers. Independent, professional and effective baldness support that unpacks baldness masculinised and medicalised framing is recommended.
topic men
body dissatisfaction
baldness
experiment
forum analysis
mixed-methods
url http://ijmsch.com/index.php/IJMSCH/article/view/55
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