Hegemony has his hand up again : examining masculinities and resistance when teaching about gender

This paper outlines interview based, qualitative research that was conducted with six male youth who were previously students in my Social Studies 11 class. Within two separate, semi-structured interviews, participants were asked to discuss student resistance to anti oppressive pedagogy that focu...

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Main Author: Moore, Shannon Dawn Maree
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5031
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.2429-50312014-03-26T03:35:46Z Hegemony has his hand up again : examining masculinities and resistance when teaching about gender Moore, Shannon Dawn Maree Gender Resistance This paper outlines interview based, qualitative research that was conducted with six male youth who were previously students in my Social Studies 11 class. Within two separate, semi-structured interviews, participants were asked to discuss student resistance to anti oppressive pedagogy that focused on gender, and their understanding of masculinities. The initial purpose of this research was to find a relationship, if any, between acts of student resistance and the construction of masculinities. Participant perceptions of masculinities evolved as the dominant theme within the interviews. These discussions revealed that student understandings of masculinity were often entrenched in hegemonic language, yet contradictions were exposed between their rote definitions and personal narratives. Further, the use of media as a discourse became a venue for complicating essentialist understandings of masculinity, and for exposing multiple, fluid, versions of masculinities. Within these discussions of multiplicity, race and sexuality became two intersections of identity that took precedence. Also the intersection of teacher identity and the reading of identity terms emerged as a salient interpretation for gender discussions in the classroom. Throughout this write-up of the research are methodological considerations surrounding power, the construction of masculinity and race, and the further entrenching of heteronormativity, in the form of methodological interludes. Finally, within the conclusion, I consider the implications for practice and future directions for research in masculinities. 2009-02-25T16:14:10Z 2009-02-25T16:14:10Z 2008 2009-02-25T16:14:10Z 2008-11 Electronic Thesis or Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5031 eng University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Gender
Resistance
spellingShingle Gender
Resistance
Moore, Shannon Dawn Maree
Hegemony has his hand up again : examining masculinities and resistance when teaching about gender
description This paper outlines interview based, qualitative research that was conducted with six male youth who were previously students in my Social Studies 11 class. Within two separate, semi-structured interviews, participants were asked to discuss student resistance to anti oppressive pedagogy that focused on gender, and their understanding of masculinities. The initial purpose of this research was to find a relationship, if any, between acts of student resistance and the construction of masculinities. Participant perceptions of masculinities evolved as the dominant theme within the interviews. These discussions revealed that student understandings of masculinity were often entrenched in hegemonic language, yet contradictions were exposed between their rote definitions and personal narratives. Further, the use of media as a discourse became a venue for complicating essentialist understandings of masculinity, and for exposing multiple, fluid, versions of masculinities. Within these discussions of multiplicity, race and sexuality became two intersections of identity that took precedence. Also the intersection of teacher identity and the reading of identity terms emerged as a salient interpretation for gender discussions in the classroom. Throughout this write-up of the research are methodological considerations surrounding power, the construction of masculinity and race, and the further entrenching of heteronormativity, in the form of methodological interludes. Finally, within the conclusion, I consider the implications for practice and future directions for research in masculinities.
author Moore, Shannon Dawn Maree
author_facet Moore, Shannon Dawn Maree
author_sort Moore, Shannon Dawn Maree
title Hegemony has his hand up again : examining masculinities and resistance when teaching about gender
title_short Hegemony has his hand up again : examining masculinities and resistance when teaching about gender
title_full Hegemony has his hand up again : examining masculinities and resistance when teaching about gender
title_fullStr Hegemony has his hand up again : examining masculinities and resistance when teaching about gender
title_full_unstemmed Hegemony has his hand up again : examining masculinities and resistance when teaching about gender
title_sort hegemony has his hand up again : examining masculinities and resistance when teaching about gender
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/5031
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