Networked masculinities in South Africa: the #MensConference as a case study

IF 2.1 Q2 SOCIOLOGY
Pablo Aguera Reneses, T. Bosch
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

ABSTRACT The role of digitally mediated networked publics in the co-production and negotiation of contemporary masculinities has not been widely researched in an African context. This paper explores networked masculinities on South African Black Twitter via the hashtag #MensConference, a fictional conference organized by men as a humorous rejection of Valentine’s Day. Drawing on a critical thematic analysis of a selection of tweets through the lens of critical masculinity studies, we uncover a wide range of masculinity discourses under the hashtag, across the traditional-liberal spectrum. While expressions of sexism and misogyny were widespread throughout the sample, men also upheld alternative and progressive models of manhood. The affordances of social media provided men with a space to express themselves, but also to police and contest notions of masculinity through in-group dynamics that worked to reinforce patriarchal hegemony. However, the interactions between black South African men on Twitter were defined by their specific social, economic and cultural context. The analysis demonstrates the critical role of social media, and Black Twitter in particular, as a key vehicle for both the reproduction and contestation of hegemonic masculinities in South Africa.
南非的网络男子气概:#男性会议案例研究
摘要数字媒介的网络公众在当代男性气质的共同制作和谈判中的作用尚未在非洲背景下得到广泛研究。本文通过#MensConference标签探讨了南非黑人推特上的网络男性气质,这是一个由男性组织的虚构会议,是对情人节的幽默拒绝。通过批判性男性气质研究的视角,对一系列推文进行了批判性主题分析,我们发现了该标签下传统自由主义范围内的广泛男性气质话语。虽然性别歧视和厌女症的表达在整个样本中普遍存在,但男性也支持另类和进步的成年模式。社交媒体的可供性为男性提供了一个表达自己的空间,也为他们提供了通过群体内的动态来监督和质疑男性气概的概念的空间,这些动态旨在强化父权制霸权。然而,南非黑人男性在推特上的互动是由他们特定的社会、经济和文化背景决定的。该分析表明,社交媒体,尤其是黑人推特,作为南非霸权男子气概再现和争夺的关键载体,发挥着关键作用。
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来源期刊
NORMA
NORMA Social Sciences-Gender Studies
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
14.30%
发文量
23
期刊介绍: NORMA is an international journal for high quality research concerning masculinity in its many forms. This is an interdisciplinary journal concerning questions about the body, about social and textual practices, and about men and masculinities in social structures. We aim to advance theory and methods in this field. We hope to present new themes for critical studies of men and masculinities, and develop new approaches to ''intersections'' with race, sexuality, class and coloniality. We are eager to have conversations about the role of men and boys, and the place of masculinities, in achieving gender equality and social equality. The journal was begun in the Nordic region; we now strongly invite scholarly work from all parts of the world, as well as research about transnational relations and spaces. All submitted manuscripts are subject to initial appraisal by the Editors, and, if found suitable for further consideration, to peer review by independent, anonymous expert referees. All peer review is double blind and submission is online via Editorial Manager.
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