Analysis Of Sexism In Barry's Guys Vs. Men

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Barry covers a very touchy subject with a sort of humoristic animosity, that proves an argument in a very discreet manner. He does so by targeting sexism in a different way than what we are use to. As a male writing about “Guys vs. Men”, he must be very intricate in the way he expresses himself. Barry must make his views fast and clear and follow them up with examples that will bring Males and Females under the same belief. By men and society “attaching great significance to manhood”, they often fall victim to their own stereotypes; thus becoming the “loons and goobers” they set out to stray away from. The most accepted definition of sexism is a gender based bigotry; women earning only seventy percent the amount of men for the same job, or men serving sixty-three percent longer …show more content…

Relating guys to dogs, only “ less hairy, and usually taller”, Barry describes that they simply can not follow any set of moral rules. That guys are aware of what they are expected to do but simply can not stay focused long enough to comply. Going one step farther than most would dare by connecting man’s immorality to a situation that directly involves their counterpart. Barry creates a scenario where the only possible way men could be faithful to their spouse is if men are “eaten by their mates immediately following copulation”. Any other possibility will be the inevitable breach of faithfulness. He wraps up his manslaughter to shows the reader the bright side of this dilemma. Guys do not breach morality on purpose, no they are just simply too incoherent to be able to follow the imposed rules. But the carnage does not stop there. Barry slips in the women 's side of this by acknowledging that all of the moral codes that society judges right and wrong, all the standards by which he was using to slander the male name, was created by women solely to keep men in

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