The Disturbing Link Between Toxic Masculinity and Internalized Misogyny

Hint: It’s entitlement.

Rachel Wayne
6 min readFeb 9, 2019

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Since the Gillette ad was released, the Internet has been a-buzz with “debate” about whether or not masculinity is under attack. Buoyed by basic misunderstanding of human gender dynamics and the wilfully ignorant belief that feminism is out to remove men from the planet, critics were quick with their outrage. “First #MeToo, now this?” pick-me girls and obtuse men both wailed. Supporters swiftly descended with real-world examples of toxic masculinity, including screencaps of yet another Nice Guy calling a woman a whore for rejecting him.

First, let’s make something clear. This notion that “toxic masculinity” includes beer, guns, and rock n’ roll is a reflection of ignorant folks’ assumption that (1) those things define masculinity and (2) that anyone is saying these preferences themselves are toxic. People posting photos of themselves in camouflage saying that they’re proud of their “toxic masculinity” are not only missing the point, they’re boomeranging the point into their own faces. Sociologists and feminists alike have been pretty clear that toxic masculinity refers to behaviors that enforce problematic notions of masculinity, such as a predilection for aggression, and the corollary that men who don’t meet these standards are “lesser.” In fact, of all the…

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Rachel Wayne

Artist/anthropologist/activist writing about art, media, culture, health, science, enterprise, and where they all meet. Join my list: http://eepurl.com/gD53QP