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Comparative Masculinities: Why Islamic Indonesian Men are Great Mates and Australian Men are Girls

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conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-13, 15:23 authored by Mike Donaldson, P Nilan, Richard HowsonRichard Howson
There may well be no known human societies in which some form of masculinity has not emerged as dominant, more socially central, more associated with power, in which a pattern of practices embodying the currently most honoured way of being male legitimates the superordination of men over women. This paper shows what a small sample of Indonesian men living in Australia thought of Australian masculinity, revealing much about hegemonic masculinity in Indonesia in the process, and disclosing some uncomfortable uniformities concerning men in both countries.

History

Citation

Donaldson, M, Nilan, P & Howson, R, Comparative Masculinities: Why Islamic Indonesian Men are Great Mates and Australian Men are Girls, Asia Reconstructed: From Critiques of Development to Postcolonial Studies - The 16th Biennial Conference of the Asian Studies Association of Australia, University of Wollongong, NSW, Australia, 26-29 June 2006.

Pagination

1-8

Language

English

RIS ID

14144

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