The Rhetorical Shaping Of Gender Summary

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Chapter 4: The Rhetorical Shaping of Gender: Competing Images of Men was a chapter that I knew nothing of. I never heard the terms masculinists, father hunger and profeminists. (Apparently Microsoft Word never recognized profeminists as a word either) Luckily I am familiar with two organizations from the book- Million Man March and Walk a Mile in Her Shoes. I needed to read this chapter because I forget that man have problems and faces inequality like any one group. This chapter is very necessary to shape people’s personal idea of gender and gender equality. Men organizations should receive the same media coverage as women, race and civil issues. The fact that these organization do not receive the same attention as women organizations continues to force men to not be able to express their problems freely. …show more content…

Like the women’s movement and the civil rights movement, this shows that any form of self-empowerment can grow from religion, nature, aggression and being left out for so long. By all means, this world needs to target men more in order to create more change. Men are still powerful, they are the reason why women fail to have equality. Women should not be the only ones coming together to discuss domestic violence, rape, the pay gap and working towards making a difference, men should too. Every movement seemed legitimate and valid in its own way except Paul Elam’s crap. The hatred he has should not be supported in anyway. I couldn’t finish reading the segment because it is sick to think a human being who came from a woman would possess so much evilness for women.
Overall I was able to understand men and the issue they face from a woman’s perspective. Society can be cruel and unfair to every group. As long as there are resources available for all members of society to voice concerns to the masses, one day there will be a place in the world that will accept everyone for who they

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