EyeSeeCold
lust for life
I found this article pretty interesting.
Why Do We Demonize Men Who Are Honest About Their Sexual Needs?
Society pressures men to initiate sexual relationships, yet punishes them when they’re candid about their desires.
Someone made a comment on reddit that female sexuality is demonized too, I agree that promiscuity is seen as a negative for women while it is a positive for men. That's not something to overlook, but at the same time males face stricter legal & social penalties for sexual interest while female sexual interest has virtually no condemnation attached to it and they are usually given the benefit of the doubt.
I notice that there're a lot of gender biases like this that are difficult to acknowledge and deal with. "Male-ness" is the status quo and feminist efforts attempt to oppose that, but there's a problem of keeping in mind that females have been oppressed for a long time yet still recognizing and giving attention to legitimate male biases.
A related concept: reverse discrimination (especially cultural/racial and religious)
Why Do We Demonize Men Who Are Honest About Their Sexual Needs?
Society pressures men to initiate sexual relationships, yet punishes them when they’re candid about their desires.
Many of us women go through our daily lives fending off unwanted male attention; most of us have worried about being attacked by men.
If I stroll down a city street or take public transit alone, I can count on being approached by men I don’t want to talk to. If I walk home after dark, I can’t help fearing assault—so much so that if a man or group of men come near me on the street, I feel my heart lodge firmly in my throat until they pass.
The pressure put on men to be initiators, but to avoid seeming creepy or aggressive, leads to an unpleasant double bind. After all, the same gross cultural pressures that make women into objects force men into instigators. (How many women do you know who proposed to their husbands?)
So how can a man express his sexual needs without being tarred as a creep? After all, the point of promoting sex-positive attitudes is for everyone to be able to be open about their needs and desires, right?
I obviously had every right to turn down my Internet Lothario. Still, I shouldn’t have called him a creep; all he was doing was being overt and honest about his desires, and he did it in a polite—though straightforward—way.
...
After a few rounds of banter, I called a halt, and he respected that. I think the word “creep” is too vague and prejudiced to mean anything anymore. But if I were willing to use the word, I’d say my Internet suitor was the opposite of a creep.
And while there’s immense cultural repression of all sexuality, there’s also a fair and growing amount of modern TV, movies and feminist energy that seek to enable female sluttitude in all its harmless, glorious forms. The stud vs. slut dichotomy is worth discussing, but it has one flaw: it entirely ignores the word “creep,” whose function appears to be restricting male sexuality to a limited, contradictory set of behaviors.
As one masculinity thread commenter named Tim observes: “The only way for a guy to guarantee that he won’t be called ‘creepy’ is to suppress entirely his sexuality, just like a woman can escape being called a slut by suppressing hers.”
I’ve got three suggestions for how we can all start taking down awful conceptions of male sexuality—and the word “creep” with them.
1) Sam summed it up best: “Accept male desire, and accept men’s word when they talk about it.”
Just as women shouldn’t have to feel exploited when they have consensual sex, men shouldn’t have to feel like they’re exploiting someone when they have consensual sex. Just as more and more space is being made for forthright discussion of female sexuality, more and more space should be made for forthright discussion of male sexuality.
2) “Male sexuality should be approached from the concept of pleasure rather than accomplishment,” writes machina, a blog commenter.
Linking sex to accomplishment rather than pleasure also leads to some men caring more about getting it done than their partners’ consent
3) Which brings me to my last thought: Let’s work to discourage sexuality that’s actually predatory or non-consensual.
Obviously, most people aren’t rapists, and as HughRistik says: “I don’t think an individual man deserves to feel that his sexuality is toxic merely because he is a man and other men have displayed their sexuality in toxic ways.”
Someone made a comment on reddit that female sexuality is demonized too, I agree that promiscuity is seen as a negative for women while it is a positive for men. That's not something to overlook, but at the same time males face stricter legal & social penalties for sexual interest while female sexual interest has virtually no condemnation attached to it and they are usually given the benefit of the doubt.
I notice that there're a lot of gender biases like this that are difficult to acknowledge and deal with. "Male-ness" is the status quo and feminist efforts attempt to oppose that, but there's a problem of keeping in mind that females have been oppressed for a long time yet still recognizing and giving attention to legitimate male biases.
A related concept: reverse discrimination (especially cultural/racial and religious)