Music in the Social and Behavioral
Sciences: An Encyclopedia
Men
Contributors: Linda Cimardi
Editors: William Forde Thompson
Book Title: Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An Encyclopedia
Chapter Title: "Men"
Pub. Date: 2014
Access Date: December 15, 2014
Publishing Company: SAGE Publications, Inc.
City: Thousand Oaks
Print ISBN: 9781452283036
Online ISBN: 9781452283012
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781452283012.n231
Print pages: 692-695
©2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
This PDF has been generated from SAGE knowledge. Please note that the pagination
of the online version will vary from the pagination of the print book.
Music in Social and Behavioral
©2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781452283012.n231University of Bologna
In several Western cultures, the word man has long been used, both in human and
social sciences and in common discourses, to mean generally the human being, without
a sexual or gendered specific connotation, but as a uniform category. However, as
sociologist Georg Simmel has demonstrated, the traditional concept of humanity [p. 692
↓ ] is implicitly shaped on manly elements and male worldviews.
Although anthropologists had long studied social institutions related to manhood,
masculinity was not thematized as a specific issue until the late 1970s, when the
influence of feminist theories and gender studies on the complex of social sciences led
to the academic foundation of men's studies. In the field of music, men's compositions
and performances, as the most manifest musical expressions in society, have
dominated the interest of both musicology and ethnomusicology at length. Similarly to
what happened in the social sciences, gender studies were central in opening up a new
approach to the investigation of men's (and women's) music, works, and performances.
Men in Social Sciences
In anthropology, social ceremonies connected to manhood (i.e., circumcision rituals)
reserved to men (e.g., some male secret societies or social bonds) have traditionally
been analyzed as some of the most evident cultural traits in a society, but little attention
was given to masculinity as a specific topic. Moreover, a central institution as marriage
has for long been analyzed as a phenomenon involving groups of people, disregarding
its crucial role for the definition of individual (male and female) identity.
In Manhood in the Making: Cultural Concepts of Masculinity (1990), anthropologist
David D. Gilmore presents several case studies concerning the notions of manhood in
different societies, with a special attention to recurrent patterns of virility. The central
element emerging from this cross-cultural comparison is the general necessity of
proving and showing masculinity in order to be a man: the individual needs to fit
culturally determined categories and display virility to assert masculine gender. In nonWestern communities, this is usually marked by body practices and rituals (e.g., Van
Gennep's rites of passage), which establish a status of manhood and a particular male
identity.
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Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An
Encyclopedia: Men
Music in Social and Behavioral
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In anthropological studies, light was shed on the construction of self-identity through
the interest for the processes of construction of the social human being, who needs
cultural operations to integrate his or her biological nature and become fully human:
this issue is conceptualized in the notion of anthropopoiesis, investigated by Francesco
Remotti in Forme di Umanità (2002). Its specification as andropoiesis (the construction
of man) introduced a renovated attention to the nonbiological, socially created elements
of manhood. Works analyzing male rituals (e.g., Nande tribe's circumcision ceremonies)
as well as their social implications (creating a neat division between recognized men
and both women and boys) have deepened understanding of the cultural and social
dimensions of masculinity.
Anthropology of youth, however, has shown how rites of passage have lost meaning, or
have been radically modified, in the postcolonial age, where urbanization, neoliberalism,
and new intergenerational relationships have opened innovative avenues to assert
masculinity. “Navigation” as the capability to find one's place in the adult world by
means of agency and choice has become an important concept in studies of youth,
especially males. Social sciences have acknowledged how the process of becoming
a man in other societies often implies forms of affirmation common to their Western
counterpart, especially based on obtaining financial incomes, the possibility of creating
and supporting one's family, and gaining social status and acceptance in the adults'
world.
In the social sciences, and especially in sociology, male identity started to be
thematized in the 1930s and 1940s in the United States with the theory of sexual
roles, intended as a psychological correspondent of biologic sex and conceptualized
as normative. In this context, heterosexuality was taken as the normal paradigm,
and scales of masculinity and femininity, with values that referred to different kinds of
cultural stereotypes, were elaborated.
A new trend of interest for investigating men's identity developed after 1970, adopting
the theoretical contributions that emerged from feminism and gender studies, which
saw gender as a system of power inequality; in a constructivist perspective, distance
was taken from sexual roles theory, the biological base for social difference was denied,
and femininities and masculinities were defined as acquired social identities, derived by
cultural prescripts and embodied by individuals through enculturation.
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Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An
Encyclopedia: Men
Music in Social and Behavioral
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During the 1980s, an academic field for men's studies emerged as a counterpart of
women's studies, focusing in particular on masculine identity, [p. 693 ↓ ] manhood
issues, male sexuality, and men's rights. Central is the theoretical construct of
“hegemonic male identity,” the idea of a dominant model of manhood as heterosexual
and institutionalized through marriage. R. W. Connell developed this concept by
demonstrating how hegemonic male identity determines asymmetrical power relations
between man and woman, but also between man and man, thus creating “subordinate
male identities.” In her work, Masculinities (1995), Connell deals with the idea of
manhood as an identity that contains multiple connotations, with heterosexuality or
homosexuality just some of the possibilities. The focus moved from one manhood to
plural concepts of masculinities.
The importance of this analytic model lies in the fact that the political order, structured
on sexual inequality where men dominate, is seen as founded on the naturalization
of male supremacy, its assumption as a natural fact and pertaining to a domain not
subjected to political discussion. In postmodern societies, the hegemonic male identity
can be considered as disarticulated into at least two different variants: one based
on the physical virility, and the other defined by economic power. Subordinate male
identities sometimes tend to support hegemonic masculinity, in its double articulation,
as a general symbolic means for the reproduction of power relations between genders,
and consequently corroborate the status quo.
More recently, men's studies broadened the net of interdisciplinary connections through
the open exchange with queer and lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT)
studies on one side, and with race, ethnic, and postcolonial studies on the other. This
has permitted the growth of a renovated scholarship in which other crucial elements
defining individual identity are considered alongside gender. In this perspective, a more
comprehensive and deeper understanding of the cogent construction of subordinate
masculinities has been possible. For example, in industrialized societies, the frequent
criminalization of men from ethnic minorities is usually related to an emphasis on their
diversity, thus racializing their male identities. By contrast, it has been demonstrated
that normative masculinities (as well as femininities) that support the hegemonic gender
models contribute to strengthen a social and political order in which the gender identity
of subordinated groups is manipulated to maintain their inferior position in society.
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Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An
Encyclopedia: Men
Music in Social and Behavioral
©2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Men's Music
The history of Western art music has been dominated by male composers, artists, and
performers because Western society saw music professionalism as a masculine activity
(with the main exception of female singers); consequently, musicology as a discipline
has typically concentrated on men's musical works and interpretations. In the last
decades, the acceptance of a gendered perspective in this field has led to thematizing
differences brought by sexual differences: manhood as an object of study in Western
art music has thus been identified, in a parallel path of research into women's role in
this musical tradition. Ruth Solie's Musicology and Difference (1993) is one of the first
works dealing with this issue, and some of the essays of the volume debate the topic of
musical masculinity.
John Blacking's leading book, How Musical Is Man? (1973), still employs “man” in the
sense of “human being,” whose varied musical behaviors are considered, until the last
two ethnomusicological studies polarize on male music traditions, usually without an
open discussion about the gendered specificity of these repertoires. Similarly to what
happened in Western art music, men's musical practice was also the most noticeable
in the majority of traditional contexts. This is because public music performing and
instrumental playing (normally accompanied by some sort of music professionalism)
is usually a male domain in several traditional societies. In sub-Saharan Africa, for
instance, music related to traditional chiefs' and kings' courts was mainly performed
by men, as royal musicians and griots. In various traditional communities, musical
instruments were reserved to men and forbidden to women, who could not play them,
and in some cases, could not even touch or see them.
In some of these contexts, musical instruments condensed conceptions of virility, which
could be related to the specific shape of the instrument, its sound, or its material. For
instance, among some Aboriginal groups, the bullroarer is a secret manly instrument
associated to male initiation because of the grave buzz it produces, which is thought
to have great power, and in some communities, [p. 694 ↓ ] to evoke spirits. For this
reason, it is taboo for women, children, and generally noninitiated men. Even in the
field of vocal music, European devotional music connected to the Catholic religion was
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Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An
Encyclopedia: Men
Music in Social and Behavioral
©2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
SAGE knowledge
primarily performed by laic male associations, the confraternities, whose polyphonic
repertoire is usually impressive, whereas female confraternities are rarer.
In ethnomusicology, the centrality of gender in music practices has been acknowledged
since the early 1990s. In this area, an early interest for women's musical expressions
has later been complemented by a focus on men's repertoires, with a deeper reflection
on gender implications. Music linked to manhood ceremonies, as the one played during
different kinds of male initiation rituals, has been analyzed in its peculiarity as manly
music expression, underlining the specific form and content as codified masculine
identity that is fostered by music. The investigation of manly concepts has equally
touched upon traditional marriage music, in which gender identity (in its dual and
opposed declinations) is usually expressed.
The relative youth of popular music studies and their strong link to sociological analysis
have marked an early adoption of research trajectories directed to the inquiry of
gender identity, and in particular of the plurality of male subjectivities, heterogeneously
represented in the different popular genres, through musical form and style, lyrical
content, and onstage performance.
LindaCimardi, University of Bologna
http://dx.doi.org/10.4135/9781452283012.n231
See Also:
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•
•
•
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Cultural Meaning of Gender
Gender
Power
Social Bonding
Women
Further Readings
Adams, R., ed. and D. Savran, eds. The Masculinity Studies Reader . Malden, MA:
Blackwell Publishers, 2002.
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Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An
Encyclopedia: Men
Music in Social and Behavioral
©2014 SAGE Publications, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
SAGE knowledge
Biddle, I. D., ed. and K. Gibson, eds. Masculinity and Western Musical Practice .
Farnham, UK: Ashgate Publishing, 2009.
Jarman-Ivens, F., ed. Oh Boy! Masculinities and Popular Music . London: Routledge,
2007.
Whitehead, S. M. Men and Masculinities: Key Themes and New Directions . Cambridge,
UK: Polity Press, 2002.
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Music in the Social and Behavioral Sciences: An
Encyclopedia: Men