Gender Roles

564 Words2 Pages

Since the beginning of time, society has implemented or prescribed defined characteristics that a man or woman need to have to meet social and cultural requirements. Through these gender roles our behavior, attitude and feelings are shaped and how our capabilities are limited or coerced. These traits make us either masculine or feminine; stereotypically manhood is affiliated with audacity, chauvinism and stoicism while womanhood is linked to submission, feebleness and sentiment. The distinction in being a man and a woman is only biological, however the societal expectations of either being masculine or feminine proliferates these differences. Traditionally, a man has to dance with death, to be the sole provider, have the strive to achieve and to mask all his emotions. Rudyard Kipling's poem, ''If'' is perfectly based on the expected roles men have to play in life. For Kipling, humbleness and modesty is the most inherent aspect of masculinity where a boy becomes a man when he doesn't let his emotions control him. Similarly, in Shakespeare's Henry V, men were expected to be a stoic and hence it was considered feminine to cry when someone had passed. This instigates a …show more content…

They are expected to feel wanted, to be beautiful and emotional to earn the protection of a man, yet when achieved the same characteristics are deemed inferior and illogical. In the Second Sex, Simone De Beauvoir states how women act as an emotional labor where the man acknowledges it but never reciprocates because of his dominance and innate mindset of his supperiority. Men are seen as the essential constantly where women are the object or victim, this makes most men feel powerful and equally women feel men are controllable when playing the roles of a

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