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It’s reigning men: gender roles and how they hurt you | Lilia Fromm | TEDxLincoln

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    My uncle Eddy is unlike
    anyone else I've ever met.
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    He grew up in Oregon,
    and resembles a lumberjack;
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    tall, muscular, bearded
    and wears flannel.
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    But, it's always been his personal style
    that I've really envied,
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    large rings, earrings
    and fabulous necklaces.
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    He often does my makeup, drag queen style
    with glittery false eyelashes,
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    brings me sparkly jewelry
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    and dresses me up
    in feather boas and bedazzled finery.
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    We spend hours together perfecting
    Ester Williams synchronized swing moves
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    and Judy Garland song and dance routines.
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    As a little girl, I thought my uncle Eddy
    was the perfect manliest of men.
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    I didn't understand
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    why Eddy would enthusiastically engage
    in these activities with me,
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    while my three older brothers
    were less than willing participants.
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    (Laughter)
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    I now understand that my brothers felt
    they couldn't stray outside
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    the expected norms of masculinity,
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    while Eddy had already crossed
    all these boundaries.
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    Now, I'm a pretty typical
    15-year-old girl,
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    I like fashion, I spend
    too much time on my phone,
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    and I have seen
    every episode of gossip girl.
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    But I'm also loud, assertive, bossy.
    I like math and I am a terrible cook.
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    Like everyone else, I possess
    both masculine and feminine qualities.
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    We can accept a woman
    with masculine traits,
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    although the same cannot be said
    for men and femininity.
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    Masculinity is consistently defined
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    by separation and oppositeness
    from femininity.
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    And in this way, masculinity
    and femininity define each other,
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    no matter their individual expectations.
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    In 1991, psychologist Monica Biernat
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    found that children do not initially see
    masculinity and femininity as opposites,
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    although as they got older, their views
    became increasingly contradictory.
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    The idea that men and women
    act as opposites,
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    and their respective traits,
    is completely learned.
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    We've internalized these traits
    with a concrete male/female association,
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    although the traits and qualities
    belonging to a woman,
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    could just as easily exist
    within any man, like my uncle Eddy.
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    When one of my brothers was a toddler,
    he had a favorite Power Ranger,
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    the pink Power Ranger.
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    He was obsessed, and would
    dress only in this outfit.
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    He didn't think the pink Power Ranger
    was feminine, he just liked the color.
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    Today he shudders with embarrassment
    whenever we bring up his close association
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    to something so feminine.
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    These identities are conscious,
    chosen behaviors
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    to act within our socials norms
    and boundaries.
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    Masculinity and femininity are formed
    by social cultural expectations,
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    not biological differences.
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    We've explored femininity,
    and we can accept
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    a wide variety of personalities
    outside the norm, as feminine.
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    We wear pants, play sports, vote,
    and can have the same jobs as men,
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    and we're still feminine.
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    This acceptance and fluidity
    is not the same for men and masculinity,
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    and men are still widely expected to live
    within their impossible stereotype.
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    Our ideals of masculinity
    allow men to maintain
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    a socially dominant position over women
    and other gender identities.
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    This social dominance of masculinity
    is known as hegemonic masculinity.
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    Hegemonic masculinity
    draws on male privilege
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    creating an idea of superiority
    and enforcing a dominance
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    over other's perceived weaknesses.
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    This idea for superiority
    sometimes leads to violence,
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    such as rape and misogyny,
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    as a man overcompensating
    for his masculinity
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    tries to prove that he is not shy,
    afraid, or worst of all, feminine.
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    Heterosexuality is one of the
    largest parts of hegemonic masculinity.
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    So men may use sexuality and homophobia
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    as a basis of "taking away"
    another man's masculinity.
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    Saying that someone is gay
    is no longer used
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    to question their sexuality,
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    but rather the term has become synonymous
    with dumb, stupid, or simply unmasculine.
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    Hegemonic masculinity causes
    many problems throughout our society,
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    although the most powerful influence
    it has, is that it limits our potential.
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    The idea that there is
    only one type of masculinity
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    boxes men into this expectation,
    and keeps women out.
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    We allow and even enforce a duality
    or double standard.
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    Male leaders are strong,
    powerful and decisive,
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    yet a woman in the same exact position
    is considered a bitch.
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    We slut-shame girls
    while admiring a man who is a player.
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    Hegemonic masculinity creates the idea
    that men are superior,
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    causing self-esteem problems among women.
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    Phrases like, "Don't be such a girl",
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    are used to describe actions
    performed poorly,
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    saying that everything girls do
    is inherently bad because of their gender.
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    Whenever gender is an issue,
    I am not at my best.
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    I wonder if many of us feel this way?
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    How many of us in our modern societies
    still struggle with their own greatness,
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    because we second-guess
    our ability to be equal?
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    I play the string bass,
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    so usually I'm the only girl
    in a group of all boy basses.
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    Last year, in the Lincoln Youth Symphony,
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    we had a playing test
    which determined our seating,
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    and when the results were released,
    I was first chair.
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    I should have been happy, ecstatic,
    and so proud of my achievement,
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    yet I only felt panic.
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    I got into my mom's car after rehearsal
    and immediately started sobbing.
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    I was certain and terrified
    that the other all male bassists
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    would be angry at me
    for being first chair.
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    I thought that I shouldn't be
    better than them
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    and continued to downplay
    my own abilities.
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    At the time, I couldn't articulate
    why I felt this way,
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    although I've since realized
    that it's because hegemonic masculinity
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    and its inherent social dominance
    had been so ingrained in me
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    that I felt it was not my place
    as a girl to demonstrate superior talent.
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    I wasn't considered any less feminine
    by my new seating,
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    although I was still limited
    in my identity
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    and what I thought that meant.
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    We are not gender conforming robots,
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    we are complex human beings
    with countless traits
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    that should not be confined by a gender.
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    Even subconsciously we are worried
    about being judged
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    or ridiculed for doing something
    outside the expected norm.
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    Kind of like a teenage girl giving
    a TEDx talk on hegemonic masculinity.
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    (Laughter)
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    By breaking down
    the stereotype of masculinity,
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    we can increase
    the acceptability of femininity.
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    These identities differ by culture,
    region, religion, and personal belief.
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    So there are unlimited forms
    of masculinity and femininity,
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    and we can be open
    to accepting them all as a spectrum,
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    instead of two strict ideals.
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    I see my uncle Eddy as the perfect man,
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    and I now admire his ability
    to transcend stereotypes boundaries.
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    I was born inside the boundaries,
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    and I'm still trying to figure out
    who I want to be in this world.
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    I'm a girl, I wear dresses;
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    yet, obviously I have
    masculine traits too.
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    None of us can live
    on one side or the other.
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    My identity is not decided
    by my etiquette,
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    being assertive,
    or my hatred of high heels.
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    So I challenge you not to limit yourself
    to being a pink or blue Power Ranger.
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    The spectrum of possibilities is endless.
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    (Applause)
Title:
It’s reigning men: gender roles and how they hurt you | Lilia Fromm | TEDxLincoln
Description:

A thoughtful, humorous commentary, Lilia Fromm’s talk It’s Reigning Men will make you rethink how traditional concepts of gender impose stereotypical ideas of masculinity and femininity on men just as much as women.

Lilia Fromm is a student at Lincoln High School, Lincoln, NE. In 2014, she gave a speech on geographic confidence at TEDxYouth@Lincoln, and she has had a successful freshman year on Lincoln High’s speech team.

This talk was given at a local TEDx event, produced independently of the TED Conferences.

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDxTalks
Duration:
07:33

English subtitles

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