fbpx
Wikipedia

Machismo

Machismo (/məˈzm, mɑː-, -ˈɪz-/; Spanish: [maˈtʃismo]; Portuguese: [maˈʃiʒmu]; from Spanish macho 'male', and -ismo)[1] is the sense of being "manly" and self-reliant, a concept associated with "a strong sense of masculine pride: an exaggerated masculinity".[2] Machismo is a term originating in the early 1930s and 1940s best defined as having pride in one's masculinity. While the term is associated with "a man's responsibility to provide for, protect, and defend his family",[3] machismo is strongly and consistently associated with dominance, aggression, exhibition, and nurturance. The correlation to machismo is found to be deeply rooted in family dynamics and culture.[4]

The Crowning of the Virtuous Hero by Peter Paul Rubens

The word macho has a long history both in Spain and Portugal, including the Spanish and Portuguese languages. Macho in Portuguese and Spanish is a strictly masculine term, derived from the Latin mascŭlus, which means "male". It was originally associated with the ideal societal role men were expected to play in their communities, most particularly Iberian language-speaking societies and countries. In addition, due to Ibero-America's history of conquest, battles and constant bureaucratic struggles, it was expected of men to possess and display bravery, courage, strength, wisdom and leadership. To ser macho (literally, "to be a macho") was an aspiration for all boys. As history shows, men were often in powerful and dominating roles thus portrayed the stereotype of a violent macho man. Thus the origin of machismo serves as an illustration of past history, the struggles that colonial Latin America faced and the evolution of gender stereotypes with time.

Machismo is a factor challenged among different groups due to how an ideal man is expected to be portrayed, which builds pressure. Mentally, men may feel the need to take up more opportunities to meet expectations, such as supporting the home, or maintaining employment, leading to increased stress. This may also take a toll as physically well straining to be strong and overexerting the body, or the opposite of putting on weight by not having the desired physique and feeling inferior. Furthermore, researchers suggest that machismo can portray the supremacy or dominance that a man feels he has over a woman due to cultural and societal factors.

Caballerosidad

 
Portrait of Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire

"Caballerosidad" in Spanish, cavalheirismo in Portuguese, or the English mixture of both (but not a proper word in any of the previously mentioned languages), caballerismo, is the Latin American understanding of manliness that focuses more on honor and chivalry.[5] The meaning of caballero is "gentleman". This meaning is derived from the concept of being one who follows a code of honor like knights used to do, or shares certain values and ideals associated with them. These include a particular pride in honor, especially when in context of treating women kindly with especial delicacy and attention.

Latin American scholars have noted that positive descriptors of machismo resemble the characteristics associated with the concept of caballerosidad.[6] Understandings of machismo in Latin American cultures are not all negative; they also involve characteristics of honor, responsibility, perseverance, and courage, related to both individual and group interaction.[6][7] Studies show that Latin American men understand masculinity to involve considerable childcare responsibilities, politeness, respect for women's autonomy, and non-violent attitudes and behaviors.[8] In this way, machismo comes to relate to both a positive and negative understanding of Latin American male identity within the immigrant context. Therefore, machismo, like all social constructions of identity, should be understood as having multiple layers.[6][9]

The word caballerosidad originates from the Spanish word caballero, which is Spanish for "knight". Caballerosidad refers to a chivalric masculine code of behavior. (Note that the English term also stems from the Latin root caballus, through the French chevalier). Like the English chivalric code, caballerosidad developed out of a medieval socio-historical class system in which people of wealth and status owned horses and other forms of horsepower for transportation, whereas the lower classes did not. It was also associated with the class of knights in the feudal system. In Spanish, caballero referred to a land-owning colonial gentleman of high station who was master of estates and/or ranches.[6]

Depictions

The depictions of Machismo vary, but not unlike like the gaucho, their characteristics are quite familiar. Machismo is based on biological, historical, cultural, psycho-social, and interpersonal traits or behaviors. Some of the well known traits are;

  • Posturing: assuming a certain, often unusual or exaggerated body posture or attitude. The macho must settle all differences, verbal or physical abuse, challenges, or disagreements with violence as opposed to diplomacy.
  • Treating their wife as a display of an aloof lord-protector: women are loving, men conquer.[10]
  • Bravado: outrageous boasting, overconfidence.
  • Social dominance: a socio-culturally defined dominance; macho swagger.
  • Sexual prowess: being sexually assertive. Shyness is a collective issue for men.[11]
  • Protecting one's honor or pride: believing in protecting the ego in spite of potential risk.
  • A willingness to face danger.[12]

From a Mexican-Chicano cultural and psychological perspective, the psycho-social traits can be summarized as; emotional invulnerability, patriarchal dominance, aggressive or controlling responses to stimuli, and ambivalence toward women.[13][14] These traits have been seen as a Mexican masculine response to the Spanish conquistador conquering of the Americas.[15] It has been noted by some scholars that machismo was adopted as a form of control for the male body.[16]

Machismo in Cuba

Early beginnings

Machismo is a source of pride for men and they must prove their manliness by upholding their dominance in their reputation and their household. Machismo comes from the assertion of male dominance in everyday life. Examples of this would be men dominating their wives, controlling their children, and demanding the utmost respect from others in the household. Machismo has become deeply woven in Cuban society and have created barriers for women to reach full equality. The reason for this is the patriarchy that runs high in Cuban society. Cuba's patriarchal society stems from the fact that Spain has had a history of using brutal war tactics and humiliation as a means to keep and establish their power. Tomas de Torquemada, who ruled as a grand inquisitor under King Ferdinand and Queen Elizabeth of Spain, used degrading and humiliating forms of torture to get information out of prisoners.

In Uva de Aragon Clavijo's, novel El Caiman Ante El Espejo , Clavijo claims that Cubans feel more power from the genital organs of past male Cuban leaders like Fidel Castro. Even though he represented a revolution, he was still a powerful and dominating man who ruled over the people. In the point of view of Clavijo, militarism and caudillismo, are what is to blame for Cuban machismo, as it established the ideology of the "leadership of the strongman" which proved to be successful in Castro becoming victorious in his revolution. Thus furthering that a male dominated political society is superior.[17] Despite Castro's leading a socialist revolution, it only seems to reinforce macho-control over the Cuban people, specifically for Cuban woman who have yet to occupy any established political positions. As of 2023, according to the organization; Victims of Communism, no woman has ever held any position of power in Cuba, including in local areas.

The idea of the male ego, where the male is symbolized as "hyper-masculine, virile, strong, paternalistic, sexually dominant, and the financial provider"[18] is reinforced by the teachings of the Catholic Church, the main religion practiced in Cuba and Latina America in general. According to Catholic Church teachings, the female should be a virgin but it's less important for the male to be one.[18] During colonial times, a female's chastity and demureness were linked to the family's societal standings [new], while the males were expected and sometimes pressured into proving their sexual prowess by having multiple partners.[18] There was a duality in the expression of love. Men were supposed to express between physical loves, while women were expected to only express spiritual love and romantic love. Even after marriage, carnal love was frowned upon if the woman expressed it too vigorously, instead she was more delighted by the romantic expression of the love.

Cuban machismo and its effect

Because of the objectification of women, domestic violence is often ignored when women decide to seek help from the police. Domestic abuse victims are given psychological counseling as a way to cope with their trauma, but little is done criminally to solve the problem.[18] Domestic Abuse cases or other violent crimes committed against women, are very rarely reported on by the media,[19] and the government does not release statistics that show the people the extent of the crimes.[20] The Cuban Revolution changed some of the ways the people of Cuba viewed women. Fidel Castro in his own words saw that the women were going through 'a revolution within the revolution, and established the Federation of Cuban Women (FMC). This organization, headed by Vilma Espin, Castro's sister in law, helped women establish themselves better into the working world and in women's right issues.[19] The FMC has continually advocated for women rights and in 1997 created the Grupo Nacional para la Prevencion y Atencion de la Violencia Familiar, a national group whose purpose is to study and find measures on how to get help for the women who fall victim to domestic violence.[19] With the help of the FMC and the Grupo Nacional para la Prevencion y Atencion de la Violencia Familiar, women can file claims against their abusers at the Office of Victim Rights. They are also now able to get access to sexual abuse therapies.[19] This by no way solves the issue of domestic abuse, but it is a turning point for the Cuban women who are now no longer feel powerless in the fight.[19]

Because Machismo is so entrenched into the very systems that keep women oppressed, women in Cuba do not hold political or monetary positions of power.[21] The role of women in revolutionary society were as subjects. Although the revolution allowed women control over their personal, professional, and reproductive lives there was a persistent view that Cuba was built by a brotherhood of men. This saw women as "revolutionary mothers" who were subalterns of the state.[22] The idea that gender equality was surface level can be shown in the Codigo de la Familia which called for men to take a more active role in the household, but was rarely enforced. Another example of this surface level equality is shown in Guevara's book, "El hombre Nuevo"(1965). Women are first and foremost depicted as wives of revolutionaries, however they also have the additional roles of militants and volunteer workers. Guevara was connecting traditional Latin American gender concepts of femininity to the socialist revolution by stating that women's commitment to the revolution was not important for the outcome of the revolution but rather for their overall desirability to men. Guevara's book continues to outline the role of women in society by dictating how they should look for men in addition to what to look for in a man.[23] The desirable Cuban man was seen as industrious and willing to serve the state when he was called upon. The Cuban man often had to participate in voluntary agricultural work to help the agricultural production of the state. This was tied to the idea that the Cuban "new man" was essential for the survival of a socialist state.[24] The depiction of women and men in Cuban media influenced gender relations in Cuban society as a whole. The outcomes of the depictions and legislations brought forth by Guevara's "New Man" are shown in the role of women in revolutionary society which saw their role in the domestic sphere mostly unchanged and pre existing notions of masculinity and femininity still being dominant in the political theatre.[25] While there are 48.9% of women in Cuban Congress, the political group that holds the most power is The Cuban Communist Party, which is made up of only 7% of women.[21] In many cases, women who do have professional jobs are often funded by the Cuban state meaning they only receive about $30 a month.[26] This means that women are employed but do not and cannot hold positions of power due to the men in power who benefit from staying in power. Machismo is mostly ingrained in domestic environments, so while 89% of women over 25 have received a secondary education,[27] if a woman is a doctor, or a lawyer even after all the work she has done during the day, at home she is still expected to cook and clean and be the primary caretaker of the children. Many feminist scholars have described this phenomenon, which takes place in other cultures, as the second shift, based on a book by Arlie Russell Hochschild by the same name.[28] Cuban males see no problem in leaving all the housework to their wives while they are allowed to go out for drinks with their friends.[29] Machismo characteristics in men have given them power over women in the home,[29] which leaves certain women more vulnerable to domestic violence committed against them. Cubans are now beginning to leave state employment, to search for jobs in tourism. These jobs produce a great deal of profit because of the wealthy tourists that visit the island and leave good tips. Cubans who were once professors and doctors are now leaving their old jobs to become bartenders and drive cabs

From the inception of machismo from both the Spanish Empire and Portuguese Empire, machismo translates to mean macho and refers to male oppression over women. Moreover, machismo is an all-encompassing term for the dominion of the elite man over 'the other'.[21] In this case 'the other' refers to women of all races and economic status, whom the macho sees as an object to protect.[21] in contrast effeminate and gay men are not seen as worthy of protection but as objects to ridicule and punish sometimes with violence. Men who do not perform their gender in the "normalized" way are referred to as maricon, (a derogatory word meaning queer or fag), because their maleness is being called into question. Many of the anti-LGBT acceptance stems from The Cuban Revolution and Fidel Castro who had strong views over masculinity and how it fit in his idea of militarism. Fidel Castro once said on homosexuality in a 1965 interview with American journalist Lee Lockwood, "A deviation of that nature clashes with the concept we have of what a militant communist should be."[30] That same year gay men in Cuba were being sent to labor camps because their sexuality made them "un-fit" to be involved in military service.[30] Machismo has not only been a tool used to control women but also to punish men who do not adhere to societal norms, should behave as well. However, in the more recent years, the establishment of CENESEX (National Centre for Sexual Education) has been established so that the population of Cuba can more readily accept sexual diversity of all kinds, especially in terms of the LGBT people. CENESEX has grown in part because of the Cuban government and with the help Mariela Castro-Espin, daughter of Raul Castro, 16th president of Cuba, and niece to Fidel Castro. CENESEX has sought to decrease homophobia in Cuba by increasing sexual awareness by holding social gatherings like anti homophobic rallies.

Cuban machismo in the media

In 1975, a new Cuban Law came onto the island: the Codigo de la Familia (Family Law). It was put into effect on 8 March 1975, 15 years after the Cuban Revolution. The new Family Law of 1975 helped a lot of women get jobs on the island and provided children with protection under the law so that child begging and homelessness amongst children was practically eradicated. The law also stated that it was required for both sexes to participated in domestic chores[31] But just because the law was passed, does not mean it was heavily reinforced, particularly in the domestic sphere.[32] One of the aspects of the new family law was not only to create equality outside of the home but inside of it as well. This new family law was not received well by many people in Cuba. And many people backlashed against the law. These grievances reflected in the media that was made in Cuba, particularly, during the "Golden Age of Cuban Cinema". In revolutionary Cuba where public political discourse was limited, films provide a platform for political discourse in Cuba by tackling controversial issues in a complex manner. Films like De Cierta Manera exemplify these shifts in Cuban society through its use of a female director and subversive plot. The film sees a relationship blossom between a low class mulatto and a middle class pale teacher. The plot, "exposes and subverts the traditional notion of spectator identification and thus posits a truly 'revolutionary' and potentially subversive character representation."[32] The revolutionary notions of the film can be seen through a romantic relationship sparking across racial and class lines. Subversive films like De Cierta Manera challenged the Latin American idea of Machismo. The Film Up to a certain point establishes a need for the abandonment of machismo in order for Cuba to be a true socialist state. Although subversive films like these were released to cement the ideal "new man" in Cuban culture, some films like Retrato de Teresa challenge the idea of Machismo, but depict the male view as dominant and instead depict the illusion of change. The abandonment of machismo is present in Cuban film although some scholars argue that it was merely surface level and represent the views of gender roles in Cuban society as a whole.[33] Women's commitment to the revolution directly influenced their desirability to men. This led to hypersexualized depictions of women who abided by the revolution while showing non revolutionary women as undesirable to men in mass media. Cuban cartoons depict desirable Cuban women as revolutionary, sexual, and voluptuous while depicting the undesirable Cuban man as Americanized.[23]

Hasta Cierto Punto

Hasta Cierto Punto directed by Tomás Gutiérrez Alea is a movie that follows Oscar, an educated playwright who writes a movie on the effects of machismo in Cuban Society. In the opening scene of this movie, there is an interview with a young black man who is asked about machismo. The young man laughs and says in the movie, "Oh, they've managed to change my attitudes on that score; I'm certainly changed up to a certain point. I've probably changed up to 80% now. Maybe they can work on me and change me to 87%. But they will never, never get me up to 100%, no way!"[34] These attitudes on-screen reflect that of many men in Cuba and their attitudes towards women having more equality in everyday life. The film that Oscar was meant to write for is directed by his friend Arturo. Both are well-educated men with stable careers in their fields, wives, cars, and other luxuries. However, Arturo believes that the issue of Machismo is most directly a working class problem and that it is up to educated men such as himself and Oscar, to raise consciousness on the issue. Oscar and Arturo use working-class dock-workers to use as research for their film. This is where they meet Lina, a working-class woman who is in charge of the dock workers. At the beginning of the film she is represented to be tough on her workers and is well respected amongst all the men she works with. Oscar, the screenwriter, finds himself enamored with her tough attitudes, which are very different from those of women he has met before. However, as the movie goes on, we see Oscar increasingly find himself frustrated with Lina's free spirit and working-class "down-to-earth" personality. Oscar sees that this is not the kind of woman he is used to. Throughout the movie, although Oscar is having an affair with his wife, he finds himself being more empathetic to working-class struggles in a way that his friend Arturo is not. Arturo still believes that all working-class men are just "macho brutes"[34] The film's dynamic on working class and bourgeois machismo is very telling of Cuban society and how class reflects on the attitudes towards machismo. It also problematizes, bourgeois men who believe they are intellectually above everyone else, including issues on machismo and women's equality.

Lasting effects of Cuban machismo

The aftermath of Guevara's "new man" ideology can be seen in the dynamics of post revolutionary romantic relationships and society. In post revolutionary Cuban society, men were in constant fear of infidelity as the importance of capitalism increased in Cuba. Now that monetary exchange had value in Cuba, daily necessitates were no longer provided for by the government which meant money was needed for day-to-day life. This meant that women would often leave their partner for someone who was wealthy or foreign because migration became an important part of Cuban society. Machismo is still present at this point and is embodied in men's paranoia, women were often controlled by their partners to ensure their faithfulness.[35] The impact of this shift in gender is seen in Cuban society as a whole. New class disparities emerge amongst poor Cuban men, wealthy Cuban men, and tourists. Cuban women are searching for wealthy men which in turn attracts more wealthy tourists to the island, leading to a further dominance of monetary exchange in Cuba which leads to a further class disparity between rich and poor Cubans.[36]

Machismo in Puerto Rico

In terms of the presence of machismo in Puerto Rican society, men were to work outside the home, manage finances, and make decisions. Women were to be subordinate to their husbands and be the homemakers. Women would often have to be dependent on men for everything. Growing up, boys are taught to adhere to the machismo code, and girls are taught the marianismo code. This practice is also followed by Puerto Rican Americans outside of the island.[37] Nonetheless, this is not the only aspect to Puerto Rican machismo. Machismo can be seen in various ways in Puerto Rico from the island's colonial history to the high cases of gender based violence that occurred in 2021. Because of this, new conversations about machismo are emerging specifically the discussion of how can we handle it and in what ways can the next generation learn about it and the effects it has on society.

Colonial history and ties to machismo

When evaluating Puerto Rico's machismo culture it's important to relate it to Puerto Rico's colonial status at first to Spain and then to the United States. When becoming a colony of Spain, Puerto Rico gained the machismo principles Spain instilled.[38] When Puerto Rico became a United States colony, the nation wanted to remedy the poverty Puerto Rico was in. This was done by situating poverty as the main effect of overpopulation. Thus, women's ability to reproduce was one of the ways the United States changed Puerto Rico's "culture of poverty".[39]

Mid to late 20th century

While Puerto Ricans may be motivated by the progressive movements of the mainland, they base their movements on their unique situation in Puerto Rico. In the 1950s, industrialization caused men's employment rates to decline while women's employment rates began to rise. Additionally, from the 1950s to the 1980s, a field of white-collar women emerged, furthering the rise in women's employment. With their new contribution to the workforce, it was still under the woman's responsibility to continue domestic tasks and now also to contribute to household finances. This caused a shift in what was deemed acceptable in households. Before women would depend greatly on a man to provide for them, but as they acquired roles that required some extent of education and provided financial aid, they were able to become more independent.[40]

In the 1960s when many Puerto Ricans were moving to New York, many women were forced toward single motherhood with values that encouraged traditions like marriage. However, women still emphasized the importance of independence and final success. As an example, a mother would advise her children to marry someone who demonstrated they could be financially stable. This was something that brought a lot of tension and inner conflict with the concept of the machismo culture. In present-day society, this machismo culture is still oppressed- in 2016, Puerto Rico was the only place where women made more than men, at $1.03 for every $1.[41][42][43]

Scholars argue that examples like these where women move toward an independent life by being a single mother, prove that machismo and/ or marianismo cannot be concretely defined. Rather, it depends on a person's decision or circumstances in society rather than a belief they were taught and followed.[40]

Rules enforced by Latin families that teach that young women should not be influenced by the dangers of the outside world, portray young women as vulnerable or in danger of being sexualized. Many times these strict rules are emphasized as some women experience pregnancy at a young age where. They are said to not be ready to carry out the task of being a young mother. Young women may even lack support from their own household families and are blamed for not being properly educated. Puerto Rican families influenced by American culture may express or bend these traditional rules whether they educated their children based on the values and morals that they were taught.[44]

2021 gender-based violence rise

In 2021, gender based violence rose.[45] So much so that Governor Pedro Pierluisi declared a state of emergency on the island due to an increase in gender based violence from 6,603 cases in 2020 to 7,876 in 2021.[46][47][45] Out of the many cases, the murders of Andrea Ruiz Costas and Keishla Rodriguez caused the public to question how gender based violence was handled within Puerto Rico's judicial system. Andrea Ruiz Costas filed three court cases before her murder, all of them were denied.[48] The judicial system accepts that, like every institution it lacks in some instances. One of those factors is the judicial system's difficult process for filling a complaint.[48] Many times this process is difficult for the victim due the lengthy process of filling the complaint and understanding the legal implications this process entails. After the government declared a state of emergency, conversations emerged about the root of gender based violence and the need for gender perspective learning to be included in Puerto Rico's Department of Education Curriculum.[49] On 26 October 2022, the Department of Education announced a curriculum called Equity and Respect for All Human Beings which will take place every fourth Wednesday of the month during homeroom period.[50] The program intends to encourage respect and equity but supporters for gender perspective learning clarify that it lacks in acknowledging terms involving gender equity and identity.[49]

LGBTQ+ tourism, discrimination, and violence

In terms of tourism, Puerto Rico was seen as one of the best places to visit for LGBTQ+ tourists.[51] However, the LGBTQ+ community is also a conflicting issue to the machismo culture. Puerto Rico is known for its strong Christian community, specifically Roman Catholic and Pentecostal, along with having smaller Jewish and Muslim communities. Due to changing times and influence from the United States, the LGBTQ+ movement has been a strong force for equality, which in Puerto Rico has not always been accepted, and even harmed in the process due to difference. One of these being the murder of Alexa Negrón Luciano, a transgender woman who in 2020 was mocked and eventually shot.[52] Alexa's murder, classified as a hate crime, provoked a conversation about transphobia on the island.[52] In relation to these conversations and the hope for a more inclusive Puerto Rican society, new gender neutral identifying terms are being used in Puerto Rico like substituting the vowels (a) or (o) in Spanish (many times the (a) in a word signifies a female, the (o) a male) for the letter (e) which is considered gender neutral.[53] Nonetheless, discrimination and segregation exists within the island; where minorities may live in different regions of the island with others of color.[54][55][56]

Machismo in Russia

 
Russian bodybuilder Ramesses Tlyakodugov.

Aside from Latin America, machismo is often thought to be a big part of Russian culture.[57][58][59][60] The macho attitude is widely accepted by Russian society and even considered desirable.[57] Russian men often engage in masculine activities such as sports including bodybuilding, which is elevated to the state of national aspiration among many men.[61]

Researchers argue that machismo in Russia can be seen when an individual exaggerated masculine pride.[62] This is something that is seen on an everyday basis in Russia, which is emphasized through magazines that promote the idealization of what a "real man" is.[63] The characteristics of a masculine man would include being heterosexual, homophobic, and having the ability to accomplish an erection. There is a strong correlation between being sexually potent and masculine as the ability to reach an orgasm is commonly used to claim the right over a woman or power over them.[63]

Implications

Generational cycle

Some people identify that machismo is perpetuated through the pressure to raise children a certain way and instill social constructions of gender throughout a child's development.[64] This is complemented by the distant father-son relationship in which intimacy and affection are typically avoided. These aspects set up the environment through which the ideology perpetuates itself.[64] It creates a sense of inferiority that drives boys to reach an unattainable level of masculinity, a pursuit often validated by the aggressive and apathetic behavior they observe in the men around them and ultimately leading them to continue the cycle.[64]

Mental health

There is accumulating evidence that supports the relation between the way men are traditionally socialized to be masculine and its harmful mental and physical health consequences.[65] Respectively, machismo, is sociocultural term associated with male and female socialization in Latin American cultures; it is a set of values, attitudes and beliefs about masculinity.[66] Although the construct of machismo holds both positive and negative aspects of masculinity, emerging research suggests the gender role conceptualization of machismo has associations with negative cognitive-emotional factors (i.e., depression symptoms; trait anxiety and anger; cynical hostility) among Latin American populations.[66]

Similarly, a well-documented disparity notes Latino adolescents reporting higher levels of depression than other ethnic backgrounds. Research suggests this may be associated to adolescent perceived gender role discrepancies which challenge the traditional perceptions of gender role (i.e., machismo).[67]

Enhanced understanding on associations between the gender role conceptualizations of machismo with negative cognitive-emotional factors may prove invaluable to mental health professionals.[66] According to Fragoso and Kashubeck, "if a therapist notes that a client seems to endorse high levels of machismo, that therapist might explore whether the client is experiencing high levels of stress and depression".[65] Therefore, "conducting a gender role assessment would help a therapist assess a client's level of machismo and whether aspects of gender role conflict are present".[65]

Many counseling psychologists are interested in further studies for comprehending the connection between counseling for males and topics such as sex-role conflicts and male socialization.[68] This high demand stems from such psychologists' abilities to make patients aware how some inflexible and pre-established ideals regarding sex-roles may be detrimental to people's way of regarding new changes in societal expectancies, fostering relationships, and physical and mental health.[68] Professionals such as Thomas Skovholt, psychology professor at the University of Minnesota, claim that more research needs to be done in order to have efficient mediation for men through counseling.[68]

Several elements of machismo are considered psychologically harmful for men.[69] Competition is a widely talked about subject in this area, as studies show that there are both positive and negative connotations to it.[69] Many benefits arise from healthy competition such as team-building abilities, active engagement, pressure handling, critical thinking, and the strive to excel.[70] As these qualities and traits are highly valued by many, they are widely taught to children from a young age both at school and at home.[70] Scholars also argue that men could be mentally harmed from competition, such as the one experienced by many at their job, as their impetus to rise above their peers and fulfill the breadwinner concept in many societies can cause stress, jealousy, and psychological strain.[69]

Negative implications

Violence

"Machismo as a cultural factor is substantially associated with crime, violence, and lawlessness independently of the structural control variables"[71] (26-27). One key aspect of Machismo's association to violence is its influence in a man's behavior towards proving his strength[64] (57). While strength and fortitude are recognized as key components to the stereotype of machismo, demonstrations of violence and aggressive actions have become almost expected of men and have been justified as desirable products of being tough and macho. It can be implied that "if you are violent, you are strong and thus more of a man than those who back down or do not fight".[72]

Violent encounters can stem from the desire to protect his family, friends, and particularly his female relatives that are vulnerable to the machismo actions of other men,[64] (59). However, through jealousy, competitiveness, and pride, violent encounters are also often pursued to demonstrate his strength to others. A man's insecurities can be fueled by a number of pressures. These range from societal pressures to "be a man" to internal pressures of overcoming an inferiority complex,[64] (59). This can translate into actions that devalue feminine characteristics and overemphasize the characteristics of strength and superiority attributed to masculinity,[64] (59).

Domestic and sexual violence

In many cases, a man's position of superiority over a female partner can lead him to gain control over different aspects of her life.[73] Since women are viewed as subservient to men in many cultures, men often have power to decide whether his wife can work, study, socialize, participate in the community, or even leave the house. With little opportunity for attaining an income, minimal means to get an education, and the few people they have as a support system, many women become dependent on their husbands financially and emotionally.[73] This leaves many women particularly vulnerable to domestic violence both because it is justified through this belief that men are superior and thus are free to express that superiority and because women cannot leave such an abusive relationship since they rely on their husbands to live.[73]

Gender roles

The power difference in the relationship between a man and a woman not only creates the social norm of machismo, but by consequence also creates the social concept of marianismo.[74] which is the idea that women are meant to be pure and wholesome. Marianismo derives its origins from Spanish Colonization, as many social constructs from Latin America do. It emphasizes the perfect femininity of a woman and her virginity. One could argue that in the similar manner of Patriarchy, the man is the head of the household while the "fragile" woman is submissive and tends to remain behind the scenes. This brings to focus the idea that women are inferior and are thus dependent on their husbands. As a result, they not only rely on their husbands for financial support, but in the social realm are put at the same level as "children under age 12, mentally ill persons, and spendthrifts"[74] (265). By way of tradition, not only are women given limited opportunities in what they are able to do and to be, but they are also viewed as people that cannot even take care of themselves. Getting married provides a woman with security under her husband's success, but also entails a lifelong commitment towards serving her husband and her children.[74]

While social pressures and expectations play huge roles in the perpetuation of the marianismo construct, this ideology is also taught to girls as they grow up.[74] They learn the importance of performing domestic labor and household chores, such as cooking and cleaning, because this will be the role they will play in their future families. They are taught that these must be done well so that they can adequately serve their families and avoid punishment and discipline by their authoritative husbands.[74] Men exercise  their authority with their demand for respect and power in the house. Thus, it could culturally be a norm to follow the rules of the man. As generations continue, the idea of machismo may diminish but will still be, to some extent, present. Further, research suggests that still in today's society, men continue to take roles that often leave women without a voice to express themselves or the power to portray.

Some experts hypothesize, since there is a lack of empirical research on gender-role conflicts, that men might suffer from such conflicts because of their fear of femininity.[69]

Professionals from several universities in the United States developed a model around this hypothesis with six behavioral patterns.[69]

  1. Restrictive emotionality: restraining oneself from expressing feelings or not allowing others to express their feelings.[69]
  2. Homophobia: the fear of homosexuals or the fear of being a homosexual, not limited to all the stereotypes associated with that.[69]
  3. Socialized control, power, and competition: The desire for the authority of being in charge of the situation, commanding others, and to excel above others.[69]
  4. Restrictive sexual and affectional behavior: Showing little to no affection or sexuality to others.[69]
  5. Obsession with achievement and success: having an ongoing complex that accomplishment, work, and illustriousness constitutes one's value.[69]
  6. Health problems: unhealthy diet, stress levels, and lifestyle.[69]

The model was developed around the idea that these six patterns are all influenced by men's fear of femininity.[69] This theory was then partially supported by a study done by five professionals.[69] Some tools already created to measure gender-role attitudes include the Personal Attitudes Questionnaire, the Bem Sex Role Inventory, the Attitudes Toward Women Scale, and the Attitudes Toward the Male's Role Scale.[69] Evidence suggests that gender-roles conflicts inflicted by machismo can lead males who were raised with this mentality and or live in a society in which machismo is prevalent to suffer high levels of anxiety and low self-esteem.[75] Additionally, studies found that many males facing such conflicts are subject to experience anger, depression, and substance abuse.[76]

Sexually-transmitted infections

One implication of the Machismo concept is the pressure for a man to be sexually experienced.[73] Male infidelity is of common practice in many cultures, as men are not as expected to hold nearly the same level of chastity as women are. Meanwhile, girls are oftentimes brought up to tolerate an unfaithful partner, since it is a part of the machismo culture.[73] As such, this puts populations at risk for transmitting STIs as men seek out multiple sexual partners with little interference from their wives or from society. The risk is further heightened by the lack of condom use by men who are both miseducated about the effectiveness of a condom's protection against STIs and the belief that this would not happen to them.[73] This mentality also deters men from getting themselves tested to know if they are HIV-positive, which leads them to even spread STIs without even knowing it.[73]

Sexuality and sexual orientation

For men in many Latin American countries, their perceived level of masculinity determines the amount of respect they receive in society.[77] Because homosexual men are associated with feminine attributes, they are perceived with lower level of masculinity, and as a result, they receive less respect than heterosexual men in society. This, in turn, can limit their "ability to achieve upward social mobility, to be taken seriously, or to hold positions of power".[77] Also, because homosexuality is seen as taboo or even sinful in many Christian denominations, homosexual men tend to lack a support system, leaving many unable to express their true sexuality. To deal with such oppression, they must make the choice either to conform to heteronormativity and repress their homosexual identity, to assimilate towards masculine ideals and practices while maintaining their homosexual identity in private, or to openly express their homosexuality and suffer ostracization from society.[77] This creates a hierarchy of homosexuality corresponding to how much "respect, power, and social standing" a homosexual man can expect to receive. The more a man acts in accordance with the stereotypical heterosexual hegemonic masculinity, the higher on the social hierarchy they are.[77]

On the lower end of the hierarchy are the locas or maricones.[77] These men are those that are deemed as effeminate because they do not live by the social construct of hegemonic masculinity and also publicize their homosexuality. As such, they receive little respect both in society in general and among the LGBT community. Many homosexual men resist being associated with the "loca" stereotype by either demonstrating overt masculinity or by ridiculing and distancing themselves from other "loca" men.[77] A common Puerto Rican saying demonstrates this resistance: "mejor un drogadicto que un pato" (better a drug addict than a faggot).[77]

Homosexuality is perceived as negative or weak within the machista ideal. It does not fit into the masculine attributes that machismo extols. This often leads homosexual or bisexual men living in machista communities to be reluctant about being open about their sexuality because of the negative connotation associated with it. Familismo, which is an idea in Latin cultures that ties an individual with a commitment to his or her family, and homophobia can sometimes cause in homosexual individuals the repression of sexual identity, family separation, and to hide their sexuality. Such situations may hinder personal shame and secret sexual actions that increases HIV and STI risk in Latino homosexuals. Regularly experiencing homophobia and low self-esteem have a connection with sexual risk. A survey conducted by the Virginia Commonwealth University found that men who had high machismo values or characteristics were more than five times more probable to participate in activities or behave in a way to put them at risk for contracting HIV or an STI.[78]

Because of the negative connotations that come with identifying as homosexual, the definition of homosexuality has become ambiguous. By genderizing sexual practices, only men who are sexually penetrated during sex, locas are considered homosexual while men who are the sexual penetrators during sex can maintain their heterosexual identity.[77] Also, in many Latin American countries, the media portrayal of homosexual men often play into the stereotype of an effeminate, flamboyant male role. As a result, the idea of a masculine homosexual man remains almost unheard of and privatized by the community and by society, which allows this stereotype of homosexual men as locas to persist.[77]

Positive implications

Altruism

Machismo can also pressure men to defend the well-being of his loved ones, his community, and his country.[79] It allows him to perform altruistic acts in order to provide protection to others. In the past, and even in many current societies where people rely on subsistence agriculture and economy to survive, machismo helped provide men with the courage to drive off potential threats to protect his land and his crop.[80] Today, this contributes to the substantial gender gap in the makeup of military and armed forces around the world, even considering growing female representation in the military today.[79] Beyond the realm of the armed forces, however, the machismo ideology can also drive men to work towards service because he is in a "superior" position, which enables him to demonstrate his success by offering his own strengths to help others. Their dependence on him can validate his ego and help maintain this difference in power.[79]

Another approach to machismo is that of the "caballerismo" ideology,[81] that because a man is the head of the household, he is responsible for the well-being of the members of his family. This describes the call for a man to be chivalrous, nurturing, and protective of his loved ones.[81] It translates to the belief that a true man would never act violent towards his wife or children, but would instead ensure that no harm come to them. Machismo, seen through this approach, inspires men to create "harmonious interpersonal relationships through respect for self and others".[82] This allows fathers to maintain positive, intimate relationships with his children and share a more egalitarian relationship with his wife.

Men and work

In many cultures in the world, there is a long-standing tradition that the man is the head of the household and is responsible for providing for the family.[83] In some cases, this may mean he is the only parent working in paid-work while in other conditions this may mean both parents are working but the man is expected to be the primary income contributor. In either case, part of the masculine identity and his self-respect is defined by his ability to provide for his family. If he is unable to do so, or if he brings home less money than that of his wife, his position as head of the family is challenged.[83] In some cultures, this may mean ultimate shame for him if he cannot fulfill this role: "that being unable to find work meant that 'there is no recognition even to [his] humanity ... Those who do not work are like dead people'"[83] (212). Beyond providing economic support for his family, a man engaging in paid-work is seen as honorable because he is sacrificing time and energy that he could be spending with his family. These are costs that cannot be repaid and thus are a priceless investment on his part towards the well-being of his family unit.[83]

Ancient history

Although culture may present homophobia, misogyny and masculinity as innately bundled together, history presents different models of masculinity.[84] Masculinity was part of homosexuality in ancient Greece. Neither was it all misogyny. Goddesses were worshiped in temples, and the female poet Sappho wrote of Lesbian love. In ancient times, women too had their share of machismo-like vices, and virtues. The lore of the Amazons, which tells of women heroically fighting as defenders in the Trojan War, and according to National Geographic, "Archaeology shows that these fierce women also smoked pot, got tattoos, killed and loved men."[85] Homosexual-machismo helped thwart Sparta's power hold over ancient Greek city-states: In 371 BC the Sacred Band of Thebes was an elite fighting unit composed of 150 homosexual male pairs. They were credited with helping remove Sparta's military domination, and their actions were linked to the spread of Western culture: Theban General Epaminondas taught Philip II of Macedon military tactics and diplomacy used to reunify the Greeks under Macedonia. His son Alexander the Great was credited with the Hellenization of Persia, Egypt and Jerusalem in 332 BC. The Greeks had the Hebrew scriptures translated into the Septuagint, fostering the spread of Judaism throughout the region.

Alexander and Hephaestion had been heavily influenced by Homer's Iliad, particularly the masculine love between Achilles and Patroclus. They paired themselves as their modern incarnation, nearly a millennium after the Trojan War. Later, the Roman Empire shared a degree of homosexuality alongside the virtues of masculinity. In 19BC, Virgil's epic poem Aeneid contributed to the folklore of Rome, while depicting the love of fellow warriors Nisus and Euryalus. In 128 AD, Antonious the love of Emperor Hadrian, was celebrated in the public. In Hebrew culture circa 1006 BC,[86] the covenant between David and Jonathan was recorded in the Books of Samuel.[87] Gradually, the Septuagint would be expanded with new Greek books, eventually forming Christian Bibles, the earliest extant versions being the Codex Vaticanus and Codex Sinaiticus from 300 AD-360 AD.

Tradeoffs

Machismo changes some dynamics of life in a way have both positive and negative effects. For example, machismo grants women authority in the home but at the expense of a man's relationship to his children and work related stress having worked long hours.

Female respect and responsibility

In the traditional household, the man is expected to work and provide for his family while his wife stays home to care for the children.[88] As such, fathers are seen as a distant authority figure to his children while mothers assume the majority of responsibility in this domestic realm and thus gain agency and the ultimate respect of her children.[88] With the rise of female power, decisions in the household can take on a more egalitarian approach, where mothers can have equal say in the household. Meanwhile, the machismo mentality in men as a provider and protector of the family can inspire him to persevere through challenges introduced by work.[88]

"Within each of our memories there Is the Image of a father who worked long hours, suffered to keep his family alive, united, and who struggled to maintain his dignity. Such a man had little time for concern over his "masculinity". Certainly he did not have ten children because of his machismo, but because he was a human being, poor, and without "access" to birth control."[89]

"Machismo ideology is as beneficial to women in that it encourages their husbands to provide for and protect them and their children. Further, by subordinating their needs to those of their family, women earn a lifetime of support from their husbands and children and in this way gain some control in the family"[90] (90). Because fathers are typically more invested in paid labor, mothers typically spend more time with the children and thus gain credibility in important decisions such as a child's schooling or a child's health care. Nevertheless, in these machist households the fathers will have the last word whenever they choose to, as they are the breadwinners, and all the family ultimately depends on them for survival. In case of a separation or divorce, it is typically the mothers who suffer the most, since they did not invest their time in their career, and will probably still have to provide and care for the children.

Prevalence and acculturation in the 21st century

Despite machismo's documented history in Iberian and Latin American communities, research throughout the years has shown a shift in prevalence among younger generations. In Brazil, researchers found that while the majority of young men interviewed held traditional attitudes on gender roles and machismo, there was a small sample of men that did not agree with these views.[12] Macho attitudes still prevail, the values place women into a lower standard.

Acculturation and education have been proposed to be a factor in how machismo is passed down through Iberian and Latin American generations in the United States.[91] According to researchers who measured self-reported levels of machismo among 72 university students, 37 whom identified as Latino, the "somewhat unique population of college-educated students who have been heavily influence[d] by egalitarian attitudes, values, and norms" may explain why ethnicity did not directly predict machismo attitudes in two studies.[91] Because education and acculturation of American values in Latino individuals may result in the development of attitudes supporting gender-equality, this demonstrates how machismo may gradually decline over time in the United States.

Moreover, researchers analyzed a large cross-sectional survey among 36 countries, including 6 Latin American countries, from 2009 and discovered countries with less gender inequality had adolescents that supported attitudes of gender-equality, though females were more likely to support LGBT and non-traditional genders than males.[92] While the mean score of gender-equality attitudes was 49.83, with lower scores indicating less gender equality attitudes, Latin American countries scored the following: Chile (51.554), Colombia (49.416), Dominican Republic (43.586), Guatemala (48.890), Mexico (45.596), Paraguay (48.370).[92] Machismo is associated with gender inequality. Therefore, this study suggests that Latino individuals living in their native countries may support more machismo attitudes than Latino immigrants adopting U.S. values of gender equality.

Masuda also studied self-reported measures of sexual relationship power among 40 recently immigrated Latino couples found data against machismo attitudes since women perceived themselves to have greater control and decision-making roles in their relationships.[93] This serves as a stark contrast because machismo traditionally creates a relationship dynamic that relegates women to submissive roles and men to dominant roles. Again, acculturation may play a role in this dynamic shift because the couples averaged about 8 years since immigrating to the United States.[93]

Acculturation has not only been associated with a decline in machismo, it has appeared to affect how it manifests and how it is transferred through generations. Recently, Mexican American adolescents in romantic relationships demonstrated "adaptive machismo", which consist of the positive qualities of machismo, such as "emotional availability, demonstrations of affection, desire to financially care for a female partner, responsibility in child-rearing, and/or to the community or friends", during conflict resolution scenarios.[94] Furthermore, while Mexican American adolescent males were found to have certain values and attitudes, such as caballerismo, passed down by their families, machismo was not one of them.[95] Because families are not teaching machismo, this implies that it may be learned from sources separate from the family unit, such as peers and the media.[96] Ultimately, these findings suggest that machismo is changing in terms of its prevalence, manifestation, and socialization.

Activism around machismo

Young Lords

Founded in 1969, the Young Lords were an organization of Puerto Rican revolutionary nationalists in Chicago and New York City.[97] Working toward the liberation of all oppressed people, the Young Lords opposed racism, capitalism, and assimilationist ideologies.[98] Seeking self-determination and community control of institutions and land, the organization's leaders made a distinct choice to denounce machismo in their revised 13-Point Program and Platform. Previously reading, "We want equality for women. Machismo must be revolutionary... Not oppressive.", the organization moved toward a more radical position, stating "We want equality for women. Down with machismo and male chauvinism".[99] This revised version of the organization's ideological platform was published in their newspaper, Palante in November 1970 - thirteen months following the original platform's publication in October 1969.

The Young Lords opposed machismo because, as member Gloria González articulated in her 1971 Palante editorial, it serves to divide members of their movement.[100] Further, the organization believed machismo serves as an extension of capitalism, a system they opposed. They understood the division of labor, including both reproductive labor and productive labor, to perpetuate the marginalization of women. They also understood the sexual objectification of women to be problematic and damaging to potentially revolutionary leaders. Moving toward this platform, however, would not have been possible without the Women of the Young Lords who pressured the organization's leadership to reject machismo during their East Coast Regional Central Committee retreat in May 1970.[101] At this retreat the group studied and theorized, formally denouncing machismo because if power was to be transferred to the people, it would have to be the hands of all the people; and if this were to be possible, the Young Lords must reject "attitudes of superiority that brothers had towards sisters" and the "passivity of sisters toward brothers (allowing brothers to come out of a macho or chauvinist, superior bag)".[102]

Criticism and controversy

Controversy surrounding colonial connotations

There is controversy surrounding the concept of machismo as being originally from Spanish or Portuguese descent. The use of Spanish and Portuguese produces historical colonial connotations through its promotion of Spanish and Portuguese masculine social construction, when the term should be used to describe specific Latin American historical masculinities.[103][104] However, the word machismo does resemble words in Spanish and Portuguese language which is why it is often associated with Spain and Portugal.

For example, the use of caballerosidad and cavalheirismo, to mean only the positive characteristics of machismo, is imbued with feudal and colonial connotations relating to colonial power relations. This is because the origin of the word resides in feudal Spanish/Portuguese descriptions of landlords that reached through and into the colonial era, exalts.[105] European culture in comparison to the so-called Latin American machismo.[6]

Consequences of a one-sided negative depiction

 
Porfirio Rubirosa, a Dominican playboy who helped internationalize the concept of the Latin Lover and Macho.

Researchers are concerned regarding the unbalanced representation of machismo within Latin American cultures, and are now focused on creating a balanced representation.[6] They have repeatedly pointed out the positive characteristics consistent with machismo, or caballerosidad: nurturance, protection of the family and its honor, dignity, wisdom, hard work, responsibility, spirituality, and emotional connectedness.[9] Latin American scholars propose there are really two different constructs within machismo, one positive and one negative. The negative construct of machismo is based on the traditional Western concept of hyper-masculinity. Caballerosidad's characteristics are exalted, while machismo's characteristics are seen as predominantly negative.[6][9]

The positive side of machismo (caballerosidad, cavalheirismo), refers to a connection to family and chivalry. However, the focus on the negative aspects and avoidance of the positive aspects of machismo coincides with the concept of marginalization and powerlessness[106] of Iberian and Latin American, and more broadly Romance-speaking European culture-derived, narratives. This is because the focus on the negative aspects and the avoidance or ignorance of the positive creates a power dynamic that legitimizes the mainstream American hegemonic idea of masculinity as the correct or more righteous form of masculinity, and subjugates machismo as a degenerated form of abuse against women and backwardness. As a result, it can create a sense of powerlessness within Latino males in their expression of their masculinity.[107][108]

Even as some researchers have discussed the distinction between positive and negative aspects of machismo, something interesting to note is that often when positive characteristics are described, those of caballerismo are brought up, which is different from machismo.

The characteristics that are usually captured by society within man often do include aggressiveness, power, dominance and more. However researchers point out that there are positive aspects that are also portrayed in machismo but are often excluded or hidden; these would include  "responsibility, honor", and bravery which are not always seen.[109] To further analyze this, for example with a man having responsibility, they portray their role to overlook their family and be their protection. They also have to continue the family legacy thus honoring their family through generations. This, however is a trait that could be diminished as could be the case when men seek respect and if they do obtain this respect, it could be that they potentially react with aggressiveness which leads into violence and abuse.[109] This would then turn a positive characteristic to a negative characteristic of machismo since this act of aggression is externalized and men portray the power they seem to have over women.[109] Because of this, it is usually the case that the negative perceptions of machismo outweigh the positives.

The phenomena of gender-based belief systems having negative and positive effects is described as ambivalent sexism, which is made of hostile sexism and benevolent sexism.[110]

Academics have noted that there are consequences of only having a negative definition for Iberian and Latin American masculinity in popular literature. Researchers have suggested that, according to the anti-Catholic and/or Nordicist views dominant in American culture, Latin American manifestations of machismo represent "all that is wrong in a man".[111] Latino academics have used this argument to explain why Latino male youth struggle in academic institutions and have high rates of criminality.[112] These are the same discourses that argue that Latino masculinity (machismo) is defined by violence, recklessness, and misogyny. Accordingly, they link these expressions as contributing to a lack of interest in academics as well as behavioral struggles in schools for Latino male youth.[113] Furthermore, disengagement from school is recommended to also be a product of "masculine work" as they often required more dangerous tasks and less skilled work. Thus, there is less priority given to school work (clean work) and rather there is a greater emphasis on work that involves a dangerous environment.[113]

Negative depictions of machismo in popular literature

Throughout popular literature, the term has continued to be associated with negative characteristics, such as sexism, misogyny, chauvinism, hyper-masculinity, and hegemonic masculinity.[114][115][96] Scholars[116] characterize "macho men" as violent, rude, womanizing, and prone to alcoholism. Authors from various disciplines typified macho men as domineering through intimidation, seducing and controlling women, and controlling children through violence.[114]

For example, in American literature, an example of machismo comes from Tennessee Williams' character Stanley Kowalski, an egotistical brother-in-law, from A Streetcar Named Desire. In the play (and 1951 film adaptation), Stanley epitomizes the tough, alpha-male (hyper-masculine) archetype, socially and physically dominating and imposing his will upon his wife and her sister, Blanche Dubois. Bound up with Stanley's aggressive and occasionally misogynistic views is a strong sense of pride and honor which leads to his hatred of Blanche.

In the play A View from the Bridge by Arthur Miller, one of the main characters, Eddie, is a classic type who displays machismo. He wants to be the best of the men around him and when beaten, becomes very agitated and increasingly irrational. The negative stereotypes depicted in American literature are not representative of all the different layers of machismo.[117] Although machismo can be portrayed as violent and aggressive throughout popular literature, scholars argue that the positive side of machismo, which includes its positive aspects is often not shown.[118]

 
Graffiti on the street expressing "Machismo Kills".

Machismo in Chile

Machismo has been studied in the schoperías (taverns) of the copper mining regions of northern Chile. In these venues women are effectively barred as customers, and the men who work in the mines cultivate a sense of masculinity that tends to be more boisterous than their work conduct. Socializing is facilitated by alcohol consumption and the men, many of whom live away from their families, demonstrate their heterosexual legitimacy by talking about women's bodies and sexual availability or boasting about their sexual achievements. The shyer customers find that they are able to interact with friends and women in ways that they could not do outside for fear of rejection. Schopería owners consider themselves obligated to cater to the customers' preferences by hiring young and attractive waitresses, and the waitresses must defend against the customers' constant attention.[119] Miners symbolize the ideal of the male worker, hostile to the bosses and to the moral authorities that have, over decades, tried to mold them into a disciplined and self-reproducing work force. Workers across the copper industry look to mining as the ultimate test of physical strength and therefore manhood. The miners often speak of the mines themselves as a jealous and punishing woman, and express fear that their wives are unfaithful. Fistfights and lesser acts of protest regularly erupt with the management, and to a lesser extent with workers who cross the lines of solidarity.[120]

Since 2007, every July the Red Chilena Contra la Violencia hacia las Mujeres (Chilean Network Against Violence Towards Women) implements its campaign "¡Cuidado! El Machismo Mata" (translating to "Beware! Machismo Kills") to raise awareness about violence against women, intrafamilial violence, and femicide.[121]

Machismo in Italian culture

Italian men also exhibit machismo ideals which favor a patriarchal power structure. [122]

See also

References

  1. ^ "machismo". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 1 February 2017. 24 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 12 May 2008.
  3. ^ Morales, Edward. S. (1996). "Gender roles among Latino gay and bisexual men: Implications for family and couple relationships". In Laird, Joan; Green, Robert-Jay (eds.). Lesbians and Gays in Couples and Families: A Handbook for Therapists. Wiley. pp. 272–297. ISBN 978-0-7879-0222-3.
  4. ^ Zinn, Maxine Baca (Summer 1982). "Chicano Men and Masculinity". Journal of Ethnic Studies. 10 (2): 29–44. ProQuest 1300556081.
  5. ^ Me lanky, Bernadette (2012). Intervention Research: Designing, Conducting, Analyzing, and Funding. Springer Publishing Co. p. 68. ISBN 978-0-8261-0957-6. from the original on 25 January 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Meza Opazo, Ramon (23 May 2021). Latino Youth and Machismo: Working Towards a More Complex Understanding of Marginalized Masculinities (Thesis).
  7. ^ Torres, José B. (1998). "Masculinity and gender roles among Puerto Rican men: Machismo on the U.S. mainland". American Journal of Orthopsychiatry. 68 (1): 16–26. doi:10.1037/h0080266. PMID 9494638.
  8. ^ Gutmann, Matthew (1996). The Meanings of Macho: Being a Man in Mexico City. Berkeley and London: University of California Press.
  9. ^ a b c Arciniega, G. Miguel; Anderson, Thomas C.; Tovar-Blank, Zoila G.; Tracey, Terence J. G. (January 2008). "Toward a fuller conception of Machismo: Development of a traditional Machismo and Caballerismo Scale". Journal of Counseling Psychology. 55 (1): 19–33. doi:10.1037/0022-0167.55.1.19.
  10. ^ "Machismo #1 | Irisol Gonzalez". irisolgonzalez. Retrieved 26 November 2022.
  11. ^ Hondagneu-Sotelo, Pierrette (1994). Gendered Transitions: Mexican Experiences of Immigration. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-07513-9.[page needed]
  12. ^ a b Barker, Gary; Loewenstein, Irene (December 1997). "Where the Boys are: Attitudes Related to Masculinity, Fatherhood, and Violence Toward Women among Low-Income Adolescent and Young Adult Males in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil". Youth & Society. 29 (2): 166–196. doi:10.1177/0044118X97029002002. S2CID 144983048.
  13. ^ Kulis, Stephen; Marsiglia, Flavio Francisco; Hecht, Michael L. (March 2002). "Gender Labels and Gender Identity as Predictors of Drug Use among Ethnically Diverse Middle School Students". Youth & Society. 33 (3): 442–475. doi:10.1177/0044118X02033003005. PMC 3045088. PMID 21359134.
  14. ^ Marsiglia, Flavio Franciso; Holleran, Lori (1999). "I've Learned So Much from My Mother: Narrative from a Group of Chicana High School Students". Social Work in Education. 21 (4): 220–237. doi:10.1093/cs/21.4.220.
  15. ^ Hardin, Michael (January 2002). "Altering Masculinities: The Spanish Conquest and the Evolution of the Latin American Machismo". International Journal of Sexuality and Gender Studies. 7 (1): 1–22. doi:10.1023/A:1013050829597. S2CID 140349743.
  16. ^ Murekian, Octavio (28 May 2018). . www.toucaninsights.com. Archived from the original on 30 June 2019. Retrieved 30 June 2019.
  17. ^ Padula, Alfred (1996). Orlandini, Alberto; Arenas, Reinaldo; Clavijo, Uva de Aragon; Fuentes, Ileana; Morera, Lisette; Ortega, Victor Joaquin; Cabale, Manolo; Nacianceno, Alfonso; Montesinos, Enrique (eds.). "Gender, Sexuality, and Revolution in Cuba". Latin American Research Review. 31 (2): 226–235. doi:10.1017/S0023879100018033. JSTOR 2504037. S2CID 252744664.
  18. ^ a b c d Kirk, Emily J. (January 2011). "Setting the Agenda for Cuban Sexuality: The Role of Cuba's Cenesex". Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies. 36 (72): 143–163. doi:10.1080/08263663.2011.10817018. S2CID 143910104.
  19. ^ a b c d e "Gender Equality and the Role of Women in Cuban Society" (PDF). February 2011.
  20. ^ Ferguson, Ann (1997). "Review of Sex and Revolution: Women in Socialist Cuba". NWSA Journal. 9 (2): 193–194. JSTOR 4316519.
  21. ^ a b c d De La Torre, Miguel A. (1999). "Beyond Machismo: A Cuban Case Study". The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics. 19: 213–233. doi:10.5840/asce19991912.
  22. ^ Vangipurapu, Ira (2016). "Gender Revolution in Socialist Cuba: Up to a Certain Point". Transcultural Negotiations of Gender. pp. 93–101. doi:10.1007/978-81-322-2437-2_9. ISBN 978-81-322-2436-5.
  23. ^ a b Zaviezo, Gabriela (21 July 2016). The New New Man: (Re)Articulations of Masculinity in Post-Revolutionary Cuba (Thesis).
  24. ^ Tomé, Lester (August 2017). "Swans in Sugarcane Fields: Proletarian Ballet Dancers and the Cuban Revolution's Industrious New Man". Dance Research Journal. 49 (2): 4–25. doi:10.1017/S0149767717000171. S2CID 194572775.
  25. ^ Hutchens, Rex R.; Chilcott, John (March 1989). The Education of Cuban Women: An Analysis of the Politics of Gender. OCLC 1064770566. ERIC ED309129.
  26. ^ Whitefield, Mimi (12 July 2016). "Study: Cubans don't make much, but it's more than state salaries indicate". Miami Herald. from the original on 1 April 2019. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  27. ^ "Gender Data Portal". datatopics.worldbank.org. from the original on 16 April 2018. Retrieved 4 December 2018.
  28. ^ Hochschild, Arlie Russell; Machung, Anne (1990). The Second Shift. Avon Books. ISBN 978-0-380-71157-4.[page needed]
  29. ^ a b University, Berkley Center for Religion, Peace and World Affairs at Georgetown. "The Truth About Gender Equality in Cuba". berkleycenter.georgetown.edu. from the original on 5 December 2018. Retrieved 4 December 2018.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  30. ^ a b "In Cuba, a Government-Backed LGBT Rights Movement Battles Against a Culture of Machismo". Social Justice News Nexus. 10 March 2017. from the original on 28 March 2019. Retrieved 5 December 2018.
  31. ^ Álvarez-Tabío Albo, Ana María (23 August 2017). "General Overview of Cuban Family Law Legislation". Florida Journal of International Law. 29 (1).
  32. ^ a b Baron, Guy (1 March 2010). "The Illusion of Equality: Machismo and Cuban Cinema of the Revolution". Bulletin of Latin American Research. 29 (3): 354–366. doi:10.1111/j.1470-9856.2010.00383.x.
  33. ^ Cabranes-Grant, Leo (July 2010). "Possession, Gender and Performance in Revolutionary Cuba: Eugenio Hernández Espinosa's María Antonia". Theatre Research International. 35 (2): 126–138. doi:10.1017/S0307883310000040. S2CID 161059893.
  34. ^ a b MacBean, James Roy; Alea, Tomás Gutiérrez (1 April 1985). "A Dialogue with Tomás Gutiérrez Alea on the Dialectics of the Spectator in 'Hasta Cierto Punto'". Film Quarterly. 38 (3): 22–29. doi:10.1525/fq.1985.38.3.04a00050.
  35. ^ Härkönen, Heidi (2013). "Love, Jealousy and Gender in Post-Soviet Havana". Journal of the Finnish Anthropological Society. 38 (3): 24–32. hdl:10138/333143.
  36. ^ Härkönen, Heidi (1 June 2015). "Negotiating desirability and material resources: changing expectations on men in post-Soviet Havana". Etnográfica. Revista do Centro em Rede de Investigação em Antropologia (vol. 19 (2)): 367–388. doi:10.4000/etnografica.4032. ISSN 0873-6561.
  37. ^ Ortiz, Gabriela S. (2013). "The Evolution of Machismo in Puerto Rico" (PDF). Gabriela Sofía Ortiz. S2CID 173170677. (PDF) from the original on 17 May 2018. Retrieved 16 May 2018.[unreliable source?][self-published source?]
  38. ^ Moreno, Marisel C. (2012). "Patriarchal Foundations: Contesting Gender/Sexual Paradigms". Family Matters: Puerto Rican Women Authors on the Island and the Mainland. University of Virginia Press. pp. 130–168. ISBN 978-0-8139-3333-7. JSTOR j.ctt6wrm20.8. Project MUSE chapter 582074.
  39. ^ Briggs, Laura (2002). "Colonialism: Familiar Territory". Reproducing Empire: Race, Sex, Science, and U.S. Imperialism in Puerto Rico. University of California Press. pp. 1–20. ISBN 978-0-520-22255-7. JSTOR 10.1525/j.ctt1pncqs.5.
  40. ^ a b Lopez, Iris (2008). "Gender Awareness across Generations". Matters of Choice: Puerto Rican Women's Struggle for Reproductive Freedom. Rutgers University Press. pp. 20–42. ISBN 978-0-8135-4372-7. JSTOR j.ctt5hj277.6.
  41. ^ Mulhere, Kaitlin (10 April 2018). "Here's the One Place in America Where the Gender Pay Gap Is Reversed". Money.com. from the original on 27 September 2020.
  42. ^ Warren, Alice Colón (2010). "Women's Employment and Changing Gender Relations in Puerto Rico". Caribbean Studies. 38 (2): 59–91. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.865.3703. doi:10.1353/crb.2010.0058. JSTOR 41220536. PMID 22073439. S2CID 24781585.
  43. ^ Warren, Alice E. Colón (2003). "Puerto Rico: Feminism and Feminist Studies". Gender and Society. 17 (5): 664–690. doi:10.1177/0891243203256024. JSTOR 3594704. S2CID 145397721.
  44. ^ Pérez, Gina (28 June 2008). "'Puertorriqueñas Rencorosas y Mejicanas Sufridas': Gendered Ethnic Identity Formation in Chicago's Latino Communities". Journal of Latin American Anthropology. 8 (2): 96–124. doi:10.1525/jlca.2003.8.2.96.
  45. ^ a b Negociado de la Policia de Puerto Rico (2021). "Incidentes de Violencia de Género año 2021" (PDF). Gobierno de Puerto Rico, Oficina de la Procuradora de las Mujeres.
  46. ^ La Fortaleza, Gobierno de Puerto Rico (24 January 2021). "Gobernador declara Estado de Emergencia por Violencia de Género". Oficina del Gobernador. Retrieved 8 October 2022.
  47. ^ Oficina de Estadísticas del Negociado de la Policía de Puerto Rico (27 January 2021). "Incidentes de Violencia Doméstica por Área Policia Año 2020" (PDF). Oficina de la Procuradora de las Mujeres, Gobierno de Puerto Rico.
  48. ^ a b Quiles, Cristina del Mar (7 July 2022). "Los tribunales ante el machismo". Centro de Periodismo Investigativo. Retrieved 22 September 2022.
  49. ^ a b Torres Nieves, Valeria María (11 August 2022). "Educadoras cuentan cómo integran la perspectiva de género en el salón". Centro de Periodismo Investigativo. Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  50. ^ Departamento de Educación de Puerto Rico (26 October 2022). "Carta núm. 015-2022-2023" (PDF). Retrieved 29 October 2022.
  51. ^ Rapp, Linda (2010). "Puerto Rico and the Caribbean". The Politics of Sexuality in Latin America: A Reader on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Rights. University of Pittsburgh Press. pp. 135–143. doi:10.2307/j.ctt5vkfk6.13. ISBN 978-0-8229-6062-1. JSTOR j.ctt5vkfk6.13. Project MUSE chapter 370586.
  52. ^ a b Kaur, Harmeet; Rivera, Rafy (2 March 2020). "El brutal asesinato de una mujer transgénero conmociona a Puerto Rico y renueva una conversación sobre la transfobia" [The brutal murder of a transgender woman shocks Puerto Rico and renews a conversation about transphobia]. CNN (in Spanish).
  53. ^ Guía de Lenguaje Inclusivo y Antirracista [Inclusive and Anti-Racist Language Guide] (in Spanish). Mentes Puertorriqueñas en Acción. 2021.
  54. ^ . 20 March 2013. Archived from the original on 17 May 2018. Retrieved 16 May 2018.
  55. ^ "TRT Exclusive: Queer and Caribbean: LGBTQ+ Culture & The Island Identity". therainbowtimesmass.com. 15 December 2017. from the original on 17 May 2018. Retrieved 16 May 2018.
  56. ^ Ramirez, Tanisha Love (3 September 2015). "How Machismo Culture Impacts Gay Latinos". Huffington Post. from the original on 24 July 2017. Retrieved 16 May 2018.
  57. ^ a b Leleim, Artem (30 June 2018). "Война из-за Никольской: а ну-ка, девушки, а ну-ка, парни" (in Russian). Gazeta.Ru. Rambler Media Group. from the original on 18 August 2018. Retrieved 18 March 2021.
  58. ^ Goncharova, Marina (27 June 2018). "Мачизм как он есть" (in Russian). NaNevskom.ru. from the original on 17 October 2021. Retrieved 18 March 2021.
  59. ^ Особенности репрезентации концепта "мачизм" в произведениях Габриэля Гарсиа Маркеса "Полковнику никто не пишет", "Хроника объявленной смерти" и "Вспоминая моих грустных шлюх" и их переводах на русский язык (Thesis) (in Russian). Научный Корреспондент. 29 January 2018. from the original on 17 October 2021. Retrieved 18 March 2021.
  60. ^ Пелевин, Виктор (13 February 2020). П5: прощальные песни политических пигмеев пиндостана (in Russian). Litres. ISBN 978-5-457-07366-1. from the original on 17 October 2021. Retrieved 18 March 2021.
  61. ^ "Главные качки российского кинематографа" (in Russian). Yandex Zen. 14 May 2020. from the original on 17 October 2021. Retrieved 18 March 2021.
  62. ^ "Lessons in On-Line Reference PublishingMerriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary. Merriam-WebsterMerriam-Webster's Collegiate Thesaurus. Merriam-WebsterMerriam-Webster's Collegiate Encyclopedia. Merriam-Webster". The Library Quarterly. 71 (3): 392–399. July 2001. doi:10.1086/603287. ISSN 0024-2519. S2CID 148183387.
  63. ^ a b Oleinik, Anton (1 July 2010). "Uses and Abuses of Sexuality in Social Interactions: Empirical Evidence from Russia". Europe-Asia Studies. 62 (5): 749–778. doi:10.1080/09668136.2010.481385. ISSN 0966-8136. S2CID 144286542.
  64. ^ a b c d e f g Ingoldsby, Bron (1991). "The Latin American Family: Familism vs. Machismo". Journal of Comparative Family Studies. 1 (1): 57–62. doi:10.3138/jcfs.22.1.57. JSTOR 41602120.
  65. ^ a b c Fragoso, Jose M.; Kashubeck, Susan (2000). "Machismo, gender role conflict, and mental health in Mexican American men". Psychology of Men & Masculinity. 1 (2): 87–97. doi:10.1037/1524-9220.1.2.87.
  66. ^ a b c Nuñez, Alicia; González, Patricia; Talavera, Gregory A.; Sanchez-Johnsen, Lisa; Roesch, Scott C.; Davis, Sonia M.; Arguelles, William; Womack, Veronica Y.; Ostrovsky, Natania W. (2016). "Machismo, marianismo, and negative cognitive-emotional factors: Findings from the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos Sociocultural Ancillary Study". Journal of Latina/o Psychology. 4 (4): 202–217. doi:10.1037/lat0000050. PMC 5102330. PMID 27840779.
  67. ^ Céspedes, Yolanda M.; Huey, Stanley J. (2008). "Depression in Latino adolescents: A cultural discrepancy perspective". Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology. 14 (2): 168–172. doi:10.1037/1099-9809.14.2.168. PMC 2493609. PMID 18426290.
  68. ^ a b c O'Neil, James M. (1981). "Male Sex Role Conflicts, Sexism, and Masculinity: Psychological Implications for Men, Women, and the Counseling Psychologist". The Counseling Psychologist. 9 (2): 61–80. doi:10.1177/001100008100900213. S2CID 145579181.
  69. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Helms, Barbara J. (1986). "Gender-Role Conflict Scale: College Men's Fear of Femininity". Sex Roles. 14 (5–6). doi:10.1007/bf00287583. S2CID 145208831.
  70. ^ a b Pandel, Hannah (10 February 2016). "Healthy competition Is Good For Children". IPA - The Voice For Freedom. from the original on 28 February 2018. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
  71. ^ Adler, Leonore Loeb (1995). Violence and the prevention of violence. Westport, Connecticut: Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-275-94873-3. from the original on 17 October 2021. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  72. ^ Walker, Julian (2005). "The Maudsley Violence Questionnaire: initial validation and reliability". Personality and Individual Differences. 38 (1): 187–201. doi:10.1016/j.paid.2004.04.001.
  73. ^ a b c d e f g Cianelli, Rosina; Ferrer, Lilian; McElmurry, Beverly (2008). "HIV Prevention and Low-Income Chilean Women: Machismo, Marianismo and HIV Misconceptions". Culture, Health & Sexuality. 10 (3): 297–306. doi:10.1080/13691050701861439. JSTOR 20461006. PMC 2603075. PMID 18432428.
  74. ^ a b c d e Resnick, R.P.; Yolanda Quinones Mayo (1996). "The Impact of Machismo on Hispanic Women". Affilia. 11 (3): 257–277. doi:10.1177/088610999601100301. S2CID 144747251.
  75. ^ Sharpe, Mark J.; Heppner, P. Paul; Dixon, Wayne A. (July 1995). "Gender role conflict, instrumentality, expressiveness, and well-being in adult men". Sex Roles. 33 (1–2): 1–18. doi:10.1007/BF01547932. S2CID 144209586.
  76. ^ Blazina, Chris; Watkins, C. Edward (October 1996). "Masculine gender role conflict: Effects on college men's psychological well-being, chemical substance usage, and attitudes towards help-seeking". Journal of Counseling Psychology. 43 (4): 461–465. doi:10.1037/0022-0167.43.4.461.
  77. ^ a b c d e f g h i Asencio, Marysol (2011). ""Locas," Respect, and Masculinity". Gender and Society. 25 (3): 335–354. doi:10.1177/0891243211409214. S2CID 144389570.
  78. ^ Sears, Jacqueline L. (2006). "Machismo as a Determinant for HIV/STD Risk Behavior Among Latino MSM". VCU Scholars Compass. from the original on 28 February 2018. Retrieved 27 February 2018.
  79. ^ a b c Paredes, Americo (1979). "The United States, Mexico, and "Machismo"". RSA Journ. 1 (1): 17–37. doi:10.2307/3814061. JSTOR 3814061.
  80. ^ Ryder, Richard (1993). "Violence and machismo". RSA Journal. 5443 (5443): 706–717. JSTOR 41376268.
  81. ^ a b Tracey, Terence; G. Miguel Arciniega; Thomas C. Anderson; Zoila G. Tovar-Blank (2008). "Toward a Fuller Conception of Machismo: Development of a Traditional Machismo and Caballerismo Scale". Journal of Counseling Psychology. 55: 19–33. doi:10.1037/0022-0167.55.1.19.
  82. ^ Owen, Jesse; Glass, Jon (2010). "Latino fathers: The relationship among machismo, acculturation, ethnic identity, and paternal involvement". Psychology of Men & Masculinity. 11 (4): 251–261. doi:10.1037/a0021477. S2CID 144489189.
  83. ^ a b c d Donaldson, Mike (2009). Migrant Men: Critical studies of masculinities and the migration experience. New York: Routledge. pp. 122–123, 210–213. ISBN 978-1-135-84624-4.
  84. ^ Masterson, Mark (15 November 2013), Hubbard, Thomas K. (ed.), "Studies of Ancient Masculinity", A Companion to Greek and Roman Sexualities, Chichester, UK: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd, pp. 17–30, doi:10.1002/9781118610657.ch2, ISBN 978-1-118-61065-7, retrieved 29 November 2022
  85. ^ "Amazon Warriors Did Indeed Fight and die Like Men". 29 October 2014. from the original on 29 July 2019. Retrieved 29 July 2019.
  86. ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). (PDF) from the original on 15 February 2019. Retrieved 30 July 2019.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  87. ^ 1 Samuel 8.3 and 2 Samuel 1.26
  88. ^ a b c Mirande, Alredo (1979). "A Reinterpretation of Male Dominance in the Chicano Family". The Family Coordinator. 28 (4): 473–479. doi:10.2307/583507. JSTOR 583507.
  89. ^ Riddell, Sosa (1974). "Chicanos and el movimiento". Aztlán. 5 (4): 155–165. JSTOR 583507.
  90. ^ Newhall, Amy (2009). The changing realities of work and family: a multidisciplinary approach. Malden, MA: John Wiley & Sons. p. 90. ISBN 978-1-4443-0528-9.
  91. ^ a b Intindola, Melissa L.; Jacobson, Ryan P.; Jacobson, Kathryn J. L.; DelCampo, Robert G. (June 2016). "Machismo in Organizations: Individual Predictors & Context-Dependent Outcomes". Employee Responsibilities and Rights Journal. 28 (2): 113–131. doi:10.1007/s10672-015-9274-5. S2CID 146571603.
  92. ^ a b Dotti Sani, Giulia M.; Quaranta, Mario (July 2017). "The Best Is Yet to Come? Attitudes Toward Gender Roles Among Adolescents in 36 Countries". Sex Roles. 77 (1–2): 30–45. doi:10.1007/s11199-016-0698-7. hdl:2434/625843. S2CID 151544032.
  93. ^ a b Matsuda, Yui (4 May 2017). "Actor–Partner Interdependence Model Analysis of Sexual Communication and Relationship/Family Planning Factors Among Immigrant Latino Couples in the United States". Health Communication. 32 (5): 612–620. doi:10.1080/10410236.2016.1160317. PMC 5253322. PMID 27367797.
  94. ^ Rueda, Heidi Adams; Williams, Lela Rankin (2016). "Mexican American Adolescent Couples Communicating About Conflict". Journal of Adolescent Research. 31 (3): 375–403. doi:10.1177/0743558415584999. S2CID 145457639.
  95. ^ Sanchez, Delida; Whittaker, Tiffany A.; Hamilton, Emma; Arango, Sarah (2017). "Familial ethnic socialization, gender role attitudes, and ethnic identity development in Mexican-origin early adolescents". Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology. 23 (3): 335–347. doi:10.1037/cdp0000142. PMID 28230388. S2CID 20692587.
  96. ^ a b Mosher, D.; Tompkins, S. (1988). "Scripting the macho man: Hypermasculine socialization and enculturation". Journal of Sex Research. 25: 60–84. doi:10.1080/00224498809551445.
  97. ^ Enck-Wanzer, Darrel (2010). The Young Lords: A Reader. New York and London: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-2242-8. pg. 10
  98. ^ Enck-Wanzer, Darrel (2010). The Young Lords: A Reader. New York and London: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-2242-8. pg. 9-13
  99. ^ Palante 8 May 1970, volume 2, number 2
  100. ^ Palante, June 1971, volume 2, number 11
  101. ^ Enck-Wanzer, Darrel (2010). The Young Lords: A Reader. New York and London: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-2242-8. pg. 33
  102. ^ Enck-Wanzer, Darrel (2010). The Young Lords: A Reader. New York and London: New York University Press. ISBN 978-0-8147-2242-8. pg. 33
  103. ^ Mignolo, Walter (2000). Local Histories/Global Designs: Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledges, and Border Thinking. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00140-1.[page needed]
  104. ^ Alcoff, Linda Martín (June 2005). "Latino vs. Hispanic: The politics of ethnic names". Philosophy & Social Criticism. 31 (4): 395–407. doi:10.1177/0191453705052972. S2CID 144267416.
  105. ^ Thobani, Sunera (2007). Exalted Subjects: Studies in the Making of Race and Nation in Canada. University of Toronto Press. pp. 2–29, 257–266. ISBN 978-1-4426-9152-0.
  106. ^ Young, Iris Marion (2000). "Five Faces of Oppression". In Adams, Maurianne; Blumenfeld, Warren J.; Castaneda, Rosie; Hackman, Heather W.; Peters, Madeline L.; Zuniga, Ximena (eds.). Readings for Diversity and Social Justice. Psychology Press. pp. 35–49. ISBN 978-0-415-92634-8.
  107. ^ Connell, R. W. (1995). Masculinities. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-08999-0.[page needed]
  108. ^ Mignolo, Walter (2000). Local Histories/Global Designs: Coloniality, Subaltern Knowledges, and Border Thinking. Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-00140-1.[page needed]
  109. ^ a b c Perilla, Julia L. (May 1999). "Domestic Violence as a Human Rights Issue: The Case of Immigrant Latinos". Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences. 21 (2): 107–133. doi:10.1177/0739986399212001. S2CID 145554405.
  110. ^ Glick, Peter; Fiske, Susan T. (1997). "Hostile and Benevolent Sexism". Psychology of Women Quarterly. 21: 119–35. doi:10.1111/j.1471-6402.1997.tb00104.x. S2CID 53683112.
  111. ^ Adams, Carlos (2006). Machismo and geographies of hope (Thesis). hdl:2376/548. OCLC 71046468.
  112. ^ Caravantes, Ernesto (2006). Clipping Their Own Wings: The Incompatibility Between Latino Culture and American Education. Hamilton Books. ISBN 978-0-7618-3536-3.[page needed]
  113. ^ a b Slutskaya, Natasha; Simpson, Ruth; Hughes, Jason; Simpson, Alexander; Uygur, Selçuk (March 2016). "Masculinity and Class in the Context of Dirty Work". Gender, Work & Organization. 23 (2): 165–182. doi:10.1111/gwao.12119.
  114. ^ a b Anders, G. (1993). "Machismo: Dead or alive?". Hispanic. 3: 14–20.
  115. ^ Ingoldsby, B. (1991). "The Latin American Family: Familism vs. Machismo". Journal of Comparative Family Studies. 1: 57–64. doi:10.3138/jcfs.22.1.57.
  116. ^ Mhof, D. (1979). Macho: Sit on It. Miami: 3L Graphics.
  117. ^ Arciniega, G. Miguel; Anderson, Thomas C.; Tovar-Blank, Zoila G.; Tracey, Terence J. G. (January 2008). "Toward a fuller conception of Machismo: Development of a traditional Machismo and Caballerismo Scale". Journal of Counseling Psychology. 55 (1): 19–33. doi:10.1037/0022-0167.55.1.19. ISSN 1939-2168.
  118. ^ Katz, Ani (8 January 2020). "Top 10 books about toxic masculinity". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 November 2022.
  119. ^ Barrientos Delgado, Jaime; Salinas Meruane, Paulina; Rojas Varas, Pablo; Meza Opazo, Patricio (1 October 2011). "Gender relations and masculinity in northern Chile mining areas: ethnography in schoperías". Etnografica. 15 (3): 413–440. doi:10.4000/etnografica.1013.
  120. ^ Klubock, Thomas Miller (1996). "Working-Class Masculinity, Middle-Class Morality, and Labor Politics in the Chilean Copper Mines". Journal of Social History. 30 (2): 435–463. doi:10.1353/jsh/30.2.435. JSTOR 3789388.
  121. ^ http://www.nomasviolenciacontramujeres.cl/cuidad-el-machismo-mata/ 6 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine (Spanish)
  122. ^ Ruffa, Chiara; Raffaelli, Rosa (18 February 2011). "Opinion | Enough Machismo Italian Style". The New York Times.

machismo, other, uses, disambiguation, macho, redirects, here, other, uses, macho, disambiguation, confused, with, masochism, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, mess. For other uses see Machismo disambiguation Macho redirects here For other uses see Macho disambiguation Not to be confused with Masochism This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article possibly contains original research Please improve it by verifying the claims made and adding inline citations Statements consisting only of original research should be removed April 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message The neutrality of this article is disputed Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message Machismo m e ˈ tʃ iː z m oʊ m ɑː ˈ tʃ ɪ z Spanish maˈtʃismo Portuguese maˈʃiʒmu from Spanish macho male and ismo 1 is the sense of being manly and self reliant a concept associated with a strong sense of masculine pride an exaggerated masculinity 2 Machismo is a term originating in the early 1930s and 1940s best defined as having pride in one s masculinity While the term is associated with a man s responsibility to provide for protect and defend his family 3 machismo is strongly and consistently associated with dominance aggression exhibition and nurturance The correlation to machismo is found to be deeply rooted in family dynamics and culture 4 The Crowning of the Virtuous Hero by Peter Paul RubensThe word macho has a long history both in Spain and Portugal including the Spanish and Portuguese languages Macho in Portuguese and Spanish is a strictly masculine term derived from the Latin mascŭlus which means male It was originally associated with the ideal societal role men were expected to play in their communities most particularly Iberian language speaking societies and countries In addition due to Ibero America s history of conquest battles and constant bureaucratic struggles it was expected of men to possess and display bravery courage strength wisdom and leadership To ser macho literally to be a macho was an aspiration for all boys As history shows men were often in powerful and dominating roles thus portrayed the stereotype of a violent macho man Thus the origin of machismo serves as an illustration of past history the struggles that colonial Latin America faced and the evolution of gender stereotypes with time Machismo is a factor challenged among different groups due to how an ideal man is expected to be portrayed which builds pressure Mentally men may feel the need to take up more opportunities to meet expectations such as supporting the home or maintaining employment leading to increased stress This may also take a toll as physically well straining to be strong and overexerting the body or the opposite of putting on weight by not having the desired physique and feeling inferior Furthermore researchers suggest that machismo can portray the supremacy or dominance that a man feels he has over a woman due to cultural and societal factors Contents 1 Caballerosidad 2 Depictions 3 Machismo in Cuba 3 1 Early beginnings 3 2 Cuban machismo and its effect 3 3 Cuban machismo in the media 3 3 1 Hasta Cierto Punto 3 3 1 1 Lasting effects of Cuban machismo 4 Machismo in Puerto Rico 4 1 Colonial history and ties to machismo 4 2 Mid to late 20th century 4 3 2021 gender based violence rise 4 4 LGBTQ tourism discrimination and violence 5 Machismo in Russia 6 Implications 6 1 Generational cycle 6 2 Mental health 6 3 Negative implications 6 3 1 Violence 6 3 2 Domestic and sexual violence 6 3 3 Gender roles 6 3 4 Sexually transmitted infections 6 3 5 Sexuality and sexual orientation 6 4 Positive implications 6 4 1 Altruism 6 4 2 Men and work 6 4 3 Ancient history 6 5 Tradeoffs 6 5 1 Female respect and responsibility 7 Prevalence and acculturation in the 21st century 8 Activism around machismo 8 1 Young Lords 9 Criticism and controversy 9 1 Controversy surrounding colonial connotations 9 2 Consequences of a one sided negative depiction 9 3 Negative depictions of machismo in popular literature 10 Machismo in Chile 11 Machismo in Italian culture 12 See also 13 ReferencesCaballerosidad Edit Portrait of Marlon Brando as Stanley Kowalski in A Streetcar Named Desire Caballerosidad in Spanish cavalheirismo in Portuguese or the English mixture of both but not a proper word in any of the previously mentioned languages caballerismo is the Latin American understanding of manliness that focuses more on honor and chivalry 5 The meaning of caballero is gentleman This meaning is derived from the concept of being one who follows a code of honor like knights used to do or shares certain values and ideals associated with them These include a particular pride in honor especially when in context of treating women kindly with especial delicacy and attention Latin American scholars have noted that positive descriptors of machismo resemble the characteristics associated with the concept of caballerosidad 6 Understandings of machismo in Latin American cultures are not all negative they also involve characteristics of honor responsibility perseverance and courage related to both individual and group interaction 6 7 Studies show that Latin American men understand masculinity to involve considerable childcare responsibilities politeness respect for women s autonomy and non violent attitudes and behaviors 8 In this way machismo comes to relate to both a positive and negative understanding of Latin American male identity within the immigrant context Therefore machismo like all social constructions of identity should be understood as having multiple layers 6 9 The word caballerosidad originates from the Spanish word caballero which is Spanish for knight Caballerosidad refers to a chivalric masculine code of behavior Note that the English term also stems from the Latin root caballus through the French chevalier Like the English chivalric code caballerosidad developed out of a medieval socio historical class system in which people of wealth and status owned horses and other forms of horsepower for transportation whereas the lower classes did not It was also associated with the class of knights in the feudal system In Spanish caballero referred to a land owning colonial gentleman of high station who was master of estates and or ranches 6 Depictions EditThe depictions of Machismo vary but not unlike like the gaucho their characteristics are quite familiar Machismo is based on biological historical cultural psycho social and interpersonal traits or behaviors Some of the well known traits are Posturing assuming a certain often unusual or exaggerated body posture or attitude The macho must settle all differences verbal or physical abuse challenges or disagreements with violence as opposed to diplomacy Treating their wife as a display of an aloof lord protector women are loving men conquer 10 Bravado outrageous boasting overconfidence Social dominance a socio culturally defined dominance macho swagger Sexual prowess being sexually assertive Shyness is a collective issue for men 11 Protecting one s honor or pride believing in protecting the ego in spite of potential risk A willingness to face danger 12 From a Mexican Chicano cultural and psychological perspective the psycho social traits can be summarized as emotional invulnerability patriarchal dominance aggressive or controlling responses to stimuli and ambivalence toward women 13 14 These traits have been seen as a Mexican masculine response to the Spanish conquistador conquering of the Americas 15 It has been noted by some scholars that machismo was adopted as a form of control for the male body 16 Machismo in Cuba EditEarly beginnings Edit Machismo is a source of pride for men and they must prove their manliness by upholding their dominance in their reputation and their household Machismo comes from the assertion of male dominance in everyday life Examples of this would be men dominating their wives controlling their children and demanding the utmost respect from others in the household Machismo has become deeply woven in Cuban society and have created barriers for women to reach full equality The reason for this is the patriarchy that runs high in Cuban society Cuba s patriarchal society stems from the fact that Spain has had a history of using brutal war tactics and humiliation as a means to keep and establish their power Tomas de Torquemada who ruled as a grand inquisitor under King Ferdinand and Queen Elizabeth of Spain used degrading and humiliating forms of torture to get information out of prisoners In Uva de Aragon Clavijo s novel El Caiman Ante El Espejo Clavijo claims that Cubans feel more power from the genital organs of past male Cuban leaders like Fidel Castro Even though he represented a revolution he was still a powerful and dominating man who ruled over the people In the point of view of Clavijo militarism and caudillismo are what is to blame for Cuban machismo as it established the ideology of the leadership of the strongman which proved to be successful in Castro becoming victorious in his revolution Thus furthering that a male dominated political society is superior 17 Despite Castro s leading a socialist revolution it only seems to reinforce macho control over the Cuban people specifically for Cuban woman who have yet to occupy any established political positions As of 2023 according to the organization Victims of Communism no woman has ever held any position of power in Cuba including in local areas The idea of the male ego where the male is symbolized as hyper masculine virile strong paternalistic sexually dominant and the financial provider 18 is reinforced by the teachings of the Catholic Church the main religion practiced in Cuba and Latina America in general According to Catholic Church teachings the female should be a virgin but it s less important for the male to be one 18 During colonial times a female s chastity and demureness were linked to the family s societal standings new while the males were expected and sometimes pressured into proving their sexual prowess by having multiple partners 18 There was a duality in the expression of love Men were supposed to express between physical loves while women were expected to only express spiritual love and romantic love Even after marriage carnal love was frowned upon if the woman expressed it too vigorously instead she was more delighted by the romantic expression of the love Cuban machismo and its effect Edit Because of the objectification of women domestic violence is often ignored when women decide to seek help from the police Domestic abuse victims are given psychological counseling as a way to cope with their trauma but little is done criminally to solve the problem 18 Domestic Abuse cases or other violent crimes committed against women are very rarely reported on by the media 19 and the government does not release statistics that show the people the extent of the crimes 20 The Cuban Revolution changed some of the ways the people of Cuba viewed women Fidel Castro in his own words saw that the women were going through a revolution within the revolution and established the Federation of Cuban Women FMC This organization headed by Vilma Espin Castro s sister in law helped women establish themselves better into the working world and in women s right issues 19 The FMC has continually advocated for women rights and in 1997 created the Grupo Nacional para la Prevencion y Atencion de la Violencia Familiar a national group whose purpose is to study and find measures on how to get help for the women who fall victim to domestic violence 19 With the help of the FMC and the Grupo Nacional para la Prevencion y Atencion de la Violencia Familiar women can file claims against their abusers at the Office of Victim Rights They are also now able to get access to sexual abuse therapies 19 This by no way solves the issue of domestic abuse but it is a turning point for the Cuban women who are now no longer feel powerless in the fight 19 Because Machismo is so entrenched into the very systems that keep women oppressed women in Cuba do not hold political or monetary positions of power 21 The role of women in revolutionary society were as subjects Although the revolution allowed women control over their personal professional and reproductive lives there was a persistent view that Cuba was built by a brotherhood of men This saw women as revolutionary mothers who were subalterns of the state 22 The idea that gender equality was surface level can be shown in the Codigo de la Familia which called for men to take a more active role in the household but was rarely enforced Another example of this surface level equality is shown in Guevara s book El hombre Nuevo 1965 Women are first and foremost depicted as wives of revolutionaries however they also have the additional roles of militants and volunteer workers Guevara was connecting traditional Latin American gender concepts of femininity to the socialist revolution by stating that women s commitment to the revolution was not important for the outcome of the revolution but rather for their overall desirability to men Guevara s book continues to outline the role of women in society by dictating how they should look for men in addition to what to look for in a man 23 The desirable Cuban man was seen as industrious and willing to serve the state when he was called upon The Cuban man often had to participate in voluntary agricultural work to help the agricultural production of the state This was tied to the idea that the Cuban new man was essential for the survival of a socialist state 24 The depiction of women and men in Cuban media influenced gender relations in Cuban society as a whole The outcomes of the depictions and legislations brought forth by Guevara s New Man are shown in the role of women in revolutionary society which saw their role in the domestic sphere mostly unchanged and pre existing notions of masculinity and femininity still being dominant in the political theatre 25 While there are 48 9 of women in Cuban Congress the political group that holds the most power is The Cuban Communist Party which is made up of only 7 of women 21 In many cases women who do have professional jobs are often funded by the Cuban state meaning they only receive about 30 a month 26 This means that women are employed but do not and cannot hold positions of power due to the men in power who benefit from staying in power Machismo is mostly ingrained in domestic environments so while 89 of women over 25 have received a secondary education 27 if a woman is a doctor or a lawyer even after all the work she has done during the day at home she is still expected to cook and clean and be the primary caretaker of the children Many feminist scholars have described this phenomenon which takes place in other cultures as the second shift based on a book by Arlie Russell Hochschild by the same name 28 Cuban males see no problem in leaving all the housework to their wives while they are allowed to go out for drinks with their friends 29 Machismo characteristics in men have given them power over women in the home 29 which leaves certain women more vulnerable to domestic violence committed against them Cubans are now beginning to leave state employment to search for jobs in tourism These jobs produce a great deal of profit because of the wealthy tourists that visit the island and leave good tips Cubans who were once professors and doctors are now leaving their old jobs to become bartenders and drive cabsFrom the inception of machismo from both the Spanish Empire and Portuguese Empire machismo translates to mean macho and refers to male oppression over women Moreover machismo is an all encompassing term for the dominion of the elite man over the other 21 In this case the other refers to women of all races and economic status whom the macho sees as an object to protect 21 in contrast effeminate and gay men are not seen as worthy of protection but as objects to ridicule and punish sometimes with violence Men who do not perform their gender in the normalized way are referred to as maricon a derogatory word meaning queer or fag because their maleness is being called into question Many of the anti LGBT acceptance stems from The Cuban Revolution and Fidel Castro who had strong views over masculinity and how it fit in his idea of militarism Fidel Castro once said on homosexuality in a 1965 interview with American journalist Lee Lockwood A deviation of that nature clashes with the concept we have of what a militant communist should be 30 That same year gay men in Cuba were being sent to labor camps because their sexuality made them un fit to be involved in military service 30 Machismo has not only been a tool used to control women but also to punish men who do not adhere to societal norms should behave as well However in the more recent years the establishment of CENESEX National Centre for Sexual Education has been established so that the population of Cuba can more readily accept sexual diversity of all kinds especially in terms of the LGBT people CENESEX has grown in part because of the Cuban government and with the help Mariela Castro Espin daughter of Raul Castro 16th president of Cuba and niece to Fidel Castro CENESEX has sought to decrease homophobia in Cuba by increasing sexual awareness by holding social gatherings like anti homophobic rallies Cuban machismo in the media Edit In 1975 a new Cuban Law came onto the island the Codigo de la Familia Family Law It was put into effect on 8 March 1975 15 years after the Cuban Revolution The new Family Law of 1975 helped a lot of women get jobs on the island and provided children with protection under the law so that child begging and homelessness amongst children was practically eradicated The law also stated that it was required for both sexes to participated in domestic chores 31 But just because the law was passed does not mean it was heavily reinforced particularly in the domestic sphere 32 One of the aspects of the new family law was not only to create equality outside of the home but inside of it as well This new family law was not received well by many people in Cuba And many people backlashed against the law These grievances reflected in the media that was made in Cuba particularly during the Golden Age of Cuban Cinema In revolutionary Cuba where public political discourse was limited films provide a platform for political discourse in Cuba by tackling controversial issues in a complex manner Films like De Cierta Manera exemplify these shifts in Cuban society through its use of a female director and subversive plot The film sees a relationship blossom between a low class mulatto and a middle class pale teacher The plot exposes and subverts the traditional notion of spectator identification and thus posits a truly revolutionary and potentially subversive character representation 32 The revolutionary notions of the film can be seen through a romantic relationship sparking across racial and class lines Subversive films like De Cierta Manera challenged the Latin American idea of Machismo The Film Up to a certain point establishes a need for the abandonment of machismo in order for Cuba to be a true socialist state Although subversive films like these were released to cement the ideal new man in Cuban culture some films like Retrato de Teresa challenge the idea of Machismo but depict the male view as dominant and instead depict the illusion of change The abandonment of machismo is present in Cuban film although some scholars argue that it was merely surface level and represent the views of gender roles in Cuban society as a whole 33 Women s commitment to the revolution directly influenced their desirability to men This led to hypersexualized depictions of women who abided by the revolution while showing non revolutionary women as undesirable to men in mass media Cuban cartoons depict desirable Cuban women as revolutionary sexual and voluptuous while depicting the undesirable Cuban man as Americanized 23 Hasta Cierto Punto Edit Hasta Cierto Punto directed by Tomas Gutierrez Alea is a movie that follows Oscar an educated playwright who writes a movie on the effects of machismo in Cuban Society In the opening scene of this movie there is an interview with a young black man who is asked about machismo The young man laughs and says in the movie Oh they ve managed to change my attitudes on that score I m certainly changed up to a certain point I ve probably changed up to 80 now Maybe they can work on me and change me to 87 But they will never never get me up to 100 no way 34 These attitudes on screen reflect that of many men in Cuba and their attitudes towards women having more equality in everyday life The film that Oscar was meant to write for is directed by his friend Arturo Both are well educated men with stable careers in their fields wives cars and other luxuries However Arturo believes that the issue of Machismo is most directly a working class problem and that it is up to educated men such as himself and Oscar to raise consciousness on the issue Oscar and Arturo use working class dock workers to use as research for their film This is where they meet Lina a working class woman who is in charge of the dock workers At the beginning of the film she is represented to be tough on her workers and is well respected amongst all the men she works with Oscar the screenwriter finds himself enamored with her tough attitudes which are very different from those of women he has met before However as the movie goes on we see Oscar increasingly find himself frustrated with Lina s free spirit and working class down to earth personality Oscar sees that this is not the kind of woman he is used to Throughout the movie although Oscar is having an affair with his wife he finds himself being more empathetic to working class struggles in a way that his friend Arturo is not Arturo still believes that all working class men are just macho brutes 34 The film s dynamic on working class and bourgeois machismo is very telling of Cuban society and how class reflects on the attitudes towards machismo It also problematizes bourgeois men who believe they are intellectually above everyone else including issues on machismo and women s equality Lasting effects of Cuban machismo Edit The aftermath of Guevara s new man ideology can be seen in the dynamics of post revolutionary romantic relationships and society In post revolutionary Cuban society men were in constant fear of infidelity as the importance of capitalism increased in Cuba Now that monetary exchange had value in Cuba daily necessitates were no longer provided for by the government which meant money was needed for day to day life This meant that women would often leave their partner for someone who was wealthy or foreign because migration became an important part of Cuban society Machismo is still present at this point and is embodied in men s paranoia women were often controlled by their partners to ensure their faithfulness 35 The impact of this shift in gender is seen in Cuban society as a whole New class disparities emerge amongst poor Cuban men wealthy Cuban men and tourists Cuban women are searching for wealthy men which in turn attracts more wealthy tourists to the island leading to a further dominance of monetary exchange in Cuba which leads to a further class disparity between rich and poor Cubans 36 Machismo in Puerto Rico EditIn terms of the presence of machismo in Puerto Rican society men were to work outside the home manage finances and make decisions Women were to be subordinate to their husbands and be the homemakers Women would often have to be dependent on men for everything Growing up boys are taught to adhere to the machismo code and girls are taught the marianismo code This practice is also followed by Puerto Rican Americans outside of the island 37 Nonetheless this is not the only aspect to Puerto Rican machismo Machismo can be seen in various ways in Puerto Rico from the island s colonial history to the high cases of gender based violence that occurred in 2021 Because of this new conversations about machismo are emerging specifically the discussion of how can we handle it and in what ways can the next generation learn about it and the effects it has on society Colonial history and ties to machismo Edit When evaluating Puerto Rico s machismo culture it s important to relate it to Puerto Rico s colonial status at first to Spain and then to the United States When becoming a colony of Spain Puerto Rico gained the machismo principles Spain instilled 38 When Puerto Rico became a United States colony the nation wanted to remedy the poverty Puerto Rico was in This was done by situating poverty as the main effect of overpopulation Thus women s ability to reproduce was one of the ways the United States changed Puerto Rico s culture of poverty 39 Mid to late 20th century Edit While Puerto Ricans may be motivated by the progressive movements of the mainland they base their movements on their unique situation in Puerto Rico In the 1950s industrialization caused men s employment rates to decline while women s employment rates began to rise Additionally from the 1950s to the 1980s a field of white collar women emerged furthering the rise in women s employment With their new contribution to the workforce it was still under the woman s responsibility to continue domestic tasks and now also to contribute to household finances This caused a shift in what was deemed acceptable in households Before women would depend greatly on a man to provide for them but as they acquired roles that required some extent of education and provided financial aid they were able to become more independent 40 In the 1960s when many Puerto Ricans were moving to New York many women were forced toward single motherhood with values that encouraged traditions like marriage However women still emphasized the importance of independence and final success As an example a mother would advise her children to marry someone who demonstrated they could be financially stable This was something that brought a lot of tension and inner conflict with the concept of the machismo culture In present day society this machismo culture is still oppressed in 2016 Puerto Rico was the only place where women made more than men at 1 03 for every 1 41 42 43 Scholars argue that examples like these where women move toward an independent life by being a single mother prove that machismo and or marianismo cannot be concretely defined Rather it depends on a person s decision or circumstances in society rather than a belief they were taught and followed 40 Rules enforced by Latin families that teach that young women should not be influenced by the dangers of the outside world portray young women as vulnerable or in danger of being sexualized Many times these strict rules are emphasized as some women experience pregnancy at a young age where They are said to not be ready to carry out the task of being a young mother Young women may even lack support from their own household families and are blamed for not being properly educated Puerto Rican families influenced by American culture may express or bend these traditional rules whether they educated their children based on the values and morals that they were taught 44 2021 gender based violence rise Edit In 2021 gender based violence rose 45 So much so that Governor Pedro Pierluisi declared a state of emergency on the island due to an increase in gender based violence from 6 603 cases in 2020 to 7 876 in 2021 46 47 45 Out of the many cases the murders of Andrea Ruiz Costas and Keishla Rodriguez caused the public to question how gender based violence was handled within Puerto Rico s judicial system Andrea Ruiz Costas filed three court cases before her murder all of them were denied 48 The judicial system accepts that like every institution it lacks in some instances One of those factors is the judicial system s difficult process for filling a complaint 48 Many times this process is difficult for the victim due the lengthy process of filling the complaint and understanding the legal implications this process entails After the government declared a state of emergency conversations emerged about the root of gender based violence and the need for gender perspective learning to be included in Puerto Rico s Department of Education Curriculum 49 On 26 October 2022 the Department of Education announced a curriculum called Equity and Respect for All Human Beings which will take place every fourth Wednesday of the month during homeroom period 50 The program intends to encourage respect and equity but supporters for gender perspective learning clarify that it lacks in acknowledging terms involving gender equity and identity 49 LGBTQ tourism discrimination and violence Edit In terms of tourism Puerto Rico was seen as one of the best places to visit for LGBTQ tourists 51 However the LGBTQ community is also a conflicting issue to the machismo culture Puerto Rico is known for its strong Christian community specifically Roman Catholic and Pentecostal along with having smaller Jewish and Muslim communities Due to changing times and influence from the United States the LGBTQ movement has been a strong force for equality which in Puerto Rico has not always been accepted and even harmed in the process due to difference One of these being the murder of Alexa Negron Luciano a transgender woman who in 2020 was mocked and eventually shot 52 Alexa s murder classified as a hate crime provoked a conversation about transphobia on the island 52 In relation to these conversations and the hope for a more inclusive Puerto Rican society new gender neutral identifying terms are being used in Puerto Rico like substituting the vowels a or o in Spanish many times the a in a word signifies a female the o a male for the letter e which is considered gender neutral 53 Nonetheless discrimination and segregation exists within the island where minorities may live in different regions of the island with others of color 54 55 56 Machismo in Russia Edit Russian bodybuilder Ramesses Tlyakodugov Aside from Latin America machismo is often thought to be a big part of Russian culture 57 58 59 60 The macho attitude is widely accepted by Russian society and even considered desirable 57 Russian men often engage in masculine activities such as sports including bodybuilding which is elevated to the state of national aspiration among many men 61 Researchers argue that machismo in Russia can be seen when an individual exaggerated masculine pride 62 This is something that is seen on an everyday basis in Russia which is emphasized through magazines that promote the idealization of what a real man is 63 The characteristics of a masculine man would include being heterosexual homophobic and having the ability to accomplish an erection There is a strong correlation between being sexually potent and masculine as the ability to reach an orgasm is commonly used to claim the right over a woman or power over them 63 Implications EditGenerational cycle Edit Some people identify that machismo is perpetuated through the pressure to raise children a certain way and instill social constructions of gender throughout a child s development 64 This is complemented by the distant father son relationship in which intimacy and affection are typically avoided These aspects set up the environment through which the ideology perpetuates itself 64 It creates a sense of inferiority that drives boys to reach an unattainable level of masculinity a pursuit often validated by the aggressive and apathetic behavior they observe in the men around them and ultimately leading them to continue the cycle 64 Mental health Edit There is accumulating evidence that supports the relation between the way men are traditionally socialized to be masculine and its harmful mental and physical health consequences 65 Respectively machismo is sociocultural term associated with male and female socialization in Latin American cultures it is a set of values attitudes and beliefs about masculinity 66 Although the construct of machismo holds both positive and negative aspects of masculinity emerging research suggests the gender role conceptualization of machismo has associations with negative cognitive emotional factors i e depression symptoms trait anxiety and anger cynical hostility among Latin American populations 66 Similarly a well documented disparity notes Latino adolescents reporting higher levels of depression than other ethnic backgrounds Research suggests this may be associated to adolescent perceived gender role discrepancies which challenge the traditional perceptions of gender role i e machismo 67 Enhanced understanding on associations between the gender role conceptualizations of machismo with negative cognitive emotional factors may prove invaluable to mental health professionals 66 According to Fragoso and Kashubeck if a therapist notes that a client seems to endorse high levels of machismo that therapist might explore whether the client is experiencing high levels of stress and depression 65 Therefore conducting a gender role assessment would help a therapist assess a client s level of machismo and whether aspects of gender role conflict are present 65 Many counseling psychologists are interested in further studies for comprehending the connection between counseling for males and topics such as sex role conflicts and male socialization 68 This high demand stems from such psychologists abilities to make patients aware how some inflexible and pre established ideals regarding sex roles may be detrimental to people s way of regarding new changes in societal expectancies fostering relationships and physical and mental health 68 Professionals such as Thomas Skovholt psychology professor at the University of Minnesota claim that more research needs to be done in order to have efficient mediation for men through counseling 68 Several elements of machismo are considered psychologically harmful for men 69 Competition is a widely talked about subject in this area as studies show that there are both positive and negative connotations to it 69 Many benefits arise from healthy competition such as team building abilities active engagement pressure handling critical thinking and the strive to excel 70 As these qualities and traits are highly valued by many they are widely taught to children from a young age both at school and at home 70 Scholars also argue that men could be mentally harmed from competition such as the one experienced by many at their job as their impetus to rise above their peers and fulfill the breadwinner concept in many societies can cause stress jealousy and psychological strain 69 Negative implications Edit Violence Edit Machismo as a cultural factor is substantially associated with crime violence and lawlessness independently of the structural control variables 71 26 27 One key aspect of Machismo s association to violence is its influence in a man s behavior towards proving his strength 64 57 While strength and fortitude are recognized as key components to the stereotype of machismo demonstrations of violence and aggressive actions have become almost expected of men and have been justified as desirable products of being tough and macho It can be implied that if you are violent you are strong and thus more of a man than those who back down or do not fight 72 Violent encounters can stem from the desire to protect his family friends and particularly his female relatives that are vulnerable to the machismo actions of other men 64 59 However through jealousy competitiveness and pride violent encounters are also often pursued to demonstrate his strength to others A man s insecurities can be fueled by a number of pressures These range from societal pressures to be a man to internal pressures of overcoming an inferiority complex 64 59 This can translate into actions that devalue feminine characteristics and overemphasize the characteristics of strength and superiority attributed to masculinity 64 59 Domestic and sexual violence Edit In many cases a man s position of superiority over a female partner can lead him to gain control over different aspects of her life 73 Since women are viewed as subservient to men in many cultures men often have power to decide whether his wife can work study socialize participate in the community or even leave the house With little opportunity for attaining an income minimal means to get an education and the few people they have as a support system many women become dependent on their husbands financially and emotionally 73 This leaves many women particularly vulnerable to domestic violence both because it is justified through this belief that men are superior and thus are free to express that superiority and because women cannot leave such an abusive relationship since they rely on their husbands to live 73 Gender roles Edit The power difference in the relationship between a man and a woman not only creates the social norm of machismo but by consequence also creates the social concept of marianismo 74 which is the idea that women are meant to be pure and wholesome Marianismo derives its origins from Spanish Colonization as many social constructs from Latin America do It emphasizes the perfect femininity of a woman and her virginity One could argue that in the similar manner of Patriarchy the man is the head of the household while the fragile woman is submissive and tends to remain behind the scenes This brings to focus the idea that women are inferior and are thus dependent on their husbands As a result they not only rely on their husbands for financial support but in the social realm are put at the same level as children under age 12 mentally ill persons and spendthrifts 74 265 By way of tradition not only are women given limited opportunities in what they are able to do and to be but they are also viewed as people that cannot even take care of themselves Getting married provides a woman with security under her husband s success but also entails a lifelong commitment towards serving her husband and her children 74 While social pressures and expectations play huge roles in the perpetuation of the marianismo construct this ideology is also taught to girls as they grow up 74 They learn the importance of performing domestic labor and household chores such as cooking and cleaning because this will be the role they will play in their future families They are taught that these must be done well so that they can adequately serve their families and avoid punishment and discipline by their authoritative husbands 74 Men exercise their authority with their demand for respect and power in the house Thus it could culturally be a norm to follow the rules of the man As generations continue the idea of machismo may diminish but will still be to some extent present Further research suggests that still in today s society men continue to take roles that often leave women without a voice to express themselves or the power to portray Some experts hypothesize since there is a lack of empirical research on gender role conflicts that men might suffer from such conflicts because of their fear of femininity 69 Professionals from several universities in the United States developed a model around this hypothesis with six behavioral patterns 69 Restrictive emotionality restraining oneself from expressing feelings or not allowing others to express their feelings 69 Homophobia the fear of homosexuals or the fear of being a homosexual not limited to all the stereotypes associated with that 69 Socialized control power and competition The desire for the authority of being in charge of the situation commanding others and to excel above others 69 Restrictive sexual and affectional behavior Showing little to no affection or sexuality to others 69 Obsession with achievement and success having an ongoing complex that accomplishment work and illustriousness constitutes one s value 69 Health problems unhealthy diet stress levels and lifestyle 69 The model was developed around the idea that these six patterns are all influenced by men s fear of femininity 69 This theory was then partially supported by a study done by five professionals 69 Some tools already created to measure gender role attitudes include the Personal Attitudes Questionnaire the Bem Sex Role Inventory the Attitudes Toward Women Scale and the Attitudes Toward the Male s Role Scale 69 Evidence suggests that gender roles conflicts inflicted by machismo can lead males who were raised with this mentality and or live in a society in which machismo is prevalent to suffer high levels of anxiety and low self esteem 75 Additionally studies found that many males facing such conflicts are subject to experience anger depression and substance abuse 76 Sexually transmitted infections Edit One implication of the Machismo concept is the pressure for a man to be sexually experienced 73 Male infidelity is of common practice in many cultures as men are not as expected to hold nearly the same level of chastity as women are Meanwhile girls are oftentimes brought up to tolerate an unfaithful partner since it is a part of the machismo culture 73 As such this puts populations at risk for transmitting STIs as men seek out multiple sexual partners with little interference from their wives or from society The risk is further heightened by the lack of condom use by men who are both miseducated about the effectiveness of a condom s protection against STIs and the belief that this would not happen to them 73 This mentality also deters men from getting themselves tested to know if they are HIV positive which leads them to even spread STIs without even knowing it 73 Sexuality and sexual orientation Edit For men in many Latin American countries their perceived level of masculinity determines the amount of respect they receive in society 77 Because homosexual men are associated with feminine attributes they are perceived with lower level of masculinity and as a result they receive less respect than heterosexual men in society This in turn can limit their ability to achieve upward social mobility to be taken seriously or to hold positions of power 77 Also because homosexuality is seen as taboo or even sinful in many Christian denominations homosexual men tend to lack a support system leaving many unable to express their true sexuality To deal with such oppression they must make the choice either to conform to heteronormativity and repress their homosexual identity to assimilate towards masculine ideals and practices while maintaining their homosexual identity in private or to openly express their homosexuality and suffer ostracization from society 77 This creates a hierarchy of homosexuality corresponding to how much respect power and social standing a homosexual man can expect to receive The more a man acts in accordance with the stereotypical heterosexual hegemonic masculinity the higher on the social hierarchy they are 77 On the lower end of the hierarchy are the locas or maricones 77 These men are those that are deemed as effeminate because they do not live by the social construct of hegemonic masculinity and also publicize their homosexuality As such they receive little respect both in society in general and among the LGBT community Many homosexual men resist being associated with the loca stereotype by either demonstrating overt masculinity or by ridiculing and distancing themselves from other loca men 77 A common Puerto Rican saying demonstrates this resistance mejor un drogadicto que un pato better a drug addict than a faggot 77 Homosexuality is perceived as negative or weak within the machista ideal It does not fit into the masculine attributes that machismo extols This often leads homosexual or bisexual men living in machista communities to be reluctant about being open about their sexuality because of the negative connotation associated with it Familismo which is an idea in Latin cultures that ties an individual with a commitment to his or her family and homophobia can sometimes cause in homosexual individuals the repression of sexual identity family separation and to hide their sexuality Such situations may hinder personal shame and secret sexual actions that increases HIV and STI risk in Latino homosexuals Regularly experiencing homophobia and low self esteem have a connection with sexual risk A survey conducted by the Virginia Commonwealth University found that men who had high machismo values or characteristics were more than five times more probable to participate in activities or behave in a way to put them at risk for contracting HIV or an STI 78 Because of the negative connotations that come with identifying as homosexual the definition of homosexuality has become ambiguous By genderizing sexual practices only men who are sexually penetrated during sex locas are considered homosexual while men who are the sexual penetrators during sex can maintain their heterosexual identity 77 Also in many Latin American countries the media portrayal of homosexual men often play into the stereotype of an effeminate flamboyant male role As a result the idea of a masculine homosexual man remains almost unheard of and privatized by the community and by society which allows this stereotype of homosexual men as locas to persist 77 Positive implications Edit Altruism Edit Machismo can also pressure men to defend the well being of his loved ones his community and his country 79 It allows him to perform altruistic acts in order to provide protection to others In the past and even in many current societies where people rely on subsistence agriculture and economy to survive machismo helped provide men with the courage to drive off potential threats to protect his land and his crop 80 Today this contributes to the substantial gender gap in the makeup of military and armed forces around the world even considering growing female representation in the military today 79 Beyond the realm of the armed forces however the machismo ideology can also drive men to work towards service because he is in a superior position which enables him to demonstrate his success by offering his own strengths to help others Their dependence on him can validate his ego and help maintain this difference in power 79 Another approach to machismo is that of the caballerismo ideology 81 that because a man is the head of the household he is responsible for the well being of the members of his family This describes the call for a man to be chivalrous nurturing and protective of his loved ones 81 It translates to the belief that a true man would never act violent towards his wife or children but would instead ensure that no harm come to them Machismo seen through this approach inspires men to create harmonious interpersonal relationships through respect for self and others 82 This allows fathers to maintain positive intimate relationships with his children and share a more egalitarian relationship with his wife Men and work Edit In many cultures in the world there is a long standing tradition that the man is the head of the household and is responsible for providing for the family 83 In some cases this may mean he is the only parent working in paid work while in other conditions this may mean both parents are working but the man is expected to be the primary income contributor In either case part of the masculine identity and his self respect is defined by his ability to provide for his family If he is unable to do so or if he brings home less money than that of his wife his position as head of the family is challenged 83 In some cultures this may mean ultimate shame for him if he cannot fulfill this role that being unable to find work meant that there is no recognition even to his humanity Those who do not work are like dead people 83 212 Beyond providing economic support for his family a man engaging in paid work is seen as honorable because he is sacrificing time and energy that he could be spending with his family These are costs that cannot be repaid and thus are a priceless investment on his part towards the well being of his family unit 83 Ancient history Edit Although culture may present homophobia misogyny and masculinity as innately bundled together history presents different models of masculinity 84 Masculinity was part of homosexuality in ancient Greece Neither was it all misogyny Goddesses were worshiped in temples and the female poet Sappho wrote of Lesbian love In ancient times women too had their share of machismo like vices and virtues The lore of the Amazons which tells of women heroically fighting as defenders in the Trojan War and according to National Geographic Archaeology shows that these fierce women also smoked pot got tattoos killed and loved men 85 Homosexual machismo helped thwart Sparta s power hold over ancient Greek city states In 371 BC the Sacred Band of Thebes was an elite fighting unit composed of 150 homosexual male pairs They were credited with helping remove Sparta s military domination and their actions were linked to the spread of Western culture Theban General Epaminondas taught Philip II of Macedon military tactics and diplomacy used to reunify the Greeks under Macedonia His son Alexander the Great was credited with the Hellenization of Persia Egypt and Jerusalem in 332 BC The Greeks had the Hebrew scriptures translated into the Septuagint fostering the spread of Judaism throughout the region Alexander and Hephaestion had been heavily influenced by Homer s Iliad particularly the masculine love between Achilles and Patroclus They paired themselves as their modern incarnation nearly a millennium after the Trojan War Later the Roman Empire shared a degree of homosexuality alongside the virtues of masculinity In 19BC Virgil s epic poem Aeneid contributed to the folklore of Rome while depicting the love of fellow warriors Nisus and Euryalus In 128 AD Antonious the love of Emperor Hadrian was celebrated in the public In Hebrew culture circa 1006 BC 86 the covenant between David and Jonathan was recorded in the Books of Samuel 87 Gradually the Septuagint would be expanded with new Greek books eventually forming Christian Bibles the earliest extant versions being the Codex Vaticanus and Codex Sinaiticus from 300 AD 360 AD Tradeoffs Edit Machismo changes some dynamics of life in a way have both positive and negative effects For example machismo grants women authority in the home but at the expense of a man s relationship to his children and work related stress having worked long hours Female respect and responsibility Edit In the traditional household the man is expected to work and provide for his family while his wife stays home to care for the children 88 As such fathers are seen as a distant authority figure to his children while mothers assume the majority of responsibility in this domestic realm and thus gain agency and the ultimate respect of her children 88 With the rise of female power decisions in the household can take on a more egalitarian approach where mothers can have equal say in the household Meanwhile the machismo mentality in men as a provider and protector of the family can inspire him to persevere through challenges introduced by work 88 Within each of our memories there Is the Image of a father who worked long hours suffered to keep his family alive united and who struggled to maintain his dignity Such a man had little time for concern over his masculinity Certainly he did not have ten children because of his machismo but because he was a human being poor and without access to birth control 89 Machismo ideology is as beneficial to women in that it encourages their husbands to provide for and protect them and their children Further by subordinating their needs to those of their family women earn a lifetime of support from their husbands and children and in this way gain some control in the family 90 90 Because fathers are typically more invested in paid labor mothers typically spend more time with the children and thus gain credibility in important decisions such as a child s schooling or a child s health care Nevertheless in these machist households the fathers will have the last word whenever they choose to as they are the breadwinners and all the family ultimately depends on them for survival In case of a separation or divorce it is typically the mothers who suffer the most since they did not invest their time in their career and will probably still have to provide and care for the children Prevalence and acculturation in the 21st century EditDespite machismo s documented history in Iberian and Latin American communities research throughout the years has shown a shift in prevalence among younger generations In Brazil researchers found that while the majority of young men interviewed held traditional attitudes on gender roles and machismo there was a small sample of men that did not agree with these views 12 Macho attitudes still prevail the values place women into a lower standard Acculturation and education have been proposed to be a factor in how machismo is passed down through Iberian and Latin American generations in the United States 91 According to researchers who measured self reported levels of machismo among 72 university students 37 whom identified as Latino the somewhat unique population of college educated students who have been heavily influence d by egalitarian attitudes values and norms may explain why ethnicity did not directly predict machismo attitudes in two studies 91 Because education and acculturation of American values in Latino individuals may result in the development of attitudes supporting gender equality this demonstrates how machismo may gradually decline over time in the United States Moreover researchers analyzed a large cross sectional survey among 36 countries including 6 Latin American countries from 2009 and discovered countries with less gender inequality had adolescents that supported attitudes of gender equality though females were more likely to support LGBT and non traditional genders than males 92 While the mean score of gender equality attitudes was 49 83 with lower scores indicating less gender equality attitudes Latin American countries scored the following Chile 51 554 Colombia 49 416 Dominican Republic 43 586 Guatemala 48 890 Mexico 45 596 Paraguay 48 370 92 Machismo is associated with gender inequality Therefore this study suggests that Latino individuals living in their native countries may support more machismo attitudes than Latino immigrants adopting U S values of gender equality Masuda also studied self reported measures of sexual relationship power among 40 recently immigrated Latino couples found data against machismo attitudes since women perceived themselves to have greater control and decision making roles in their relationships 93 This serves as a stark contrast because machismo traditionally creates a relationship dynamic that relegates women to submissive roles and men to dominant roles Again acculturation may play a role in this dynamic shift because the couples averaged about 8 years since immigrating to the United States 93 Acculturation has not only been associated with a decline in machismo it has appeared to affect how it manifests and how it is transferred through generations Recently Mexican American adolescents in romantic relationships demonstrated adaptive machismo which consist of the positive qualities of machismo such as emotional availability demonstrations of affection desire to financially care for a female partner responsibility in child rearing and or to the community or friends during conflict resolution scenarios 94 Furthermore while Mexican American adolescent males were found to have certain values and attitudes such as caballerismo passed down by their families machismo was not one of them 95 Because families are not teaching machismo this implies that it may be learned from sources separate from the family unit such as peers and the media 96 Ultimately these findings suggest that machismo is changing in terms of its prevalence manifestation and socialization Activism around machismo EditYoung Lords Edit Founded in 1969 the Young Lords were an organization of Puerto Rican revolutionary nationalists in Chicago and New York City 97 Working toward the liberation of all oppressed people the Young Lords opposed racism capitalism and assimilationist ideologies 98 Seeking self determination and community control of institutions and land the organization s leaders made a distinct choice to denounce machismo in their revised 13 Point Program and Platform Previously reading We want equality for women Machismo must be revolutionary Not oppressive the organization moved toward a more radical position stating We want equality for women Down with machismo and male chauvinism 99 This revised version of the organization s ideological platform was published in their newspaper Palante in November 1970 thirteen months following the original platform s publication in October 1969 The Young Lords opposed machismo because as member Gloria Gonzalez articulated in her 1971 Palante editorial it serves to divide members of their movement 100 Further the organization believed machismo serves as an extension of capitalism a system they opposed They understood the division of labor including both reproductive labor and productive labor to perpetuate the marginalization of women They also understood the sexual objectification of women to be problematic and damaging to potentially revolutionary leaders Moving toward this platform however would not have been possible without the Women of the Young Lords who pressured the organization s leadership to reject machismo during their East Coast Regional Central Committee retreat in May 1970 101 At this retreat the group studied and theorized formally denouncing machismo because if power was to be transferred to the people it would have to be the hands of all the people and if this were to be possible the Young Lords must reject attitudes of superiority that brothers had towards sisters and the passivity of sisters toward brothers allowing brothers to come out of a macho or chauvinist superior bag 102 Criticism and controversy EditThis article may lend undue weight to certain ideas incidents or controversies Please help improve it by rewriting it in a balanced fashion that contextualizes different points of view December 2017 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article may be too technical for most readers to understand Please help improve it to make it understandable to non experts without removing the technical details June 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message Controversy surrounding colonial connotations Edit There is controversy surrounding the concept of machismo as being originally from Spanish or Portuguese descent The use of Spanish and Portuguese produces historical colonial connotations through its promotion of Spanish and Portuguese masculine social construction when the term should be used to describe specific Latin American historical masculinities 103 104 However the word machismo does resemble words in Spanish and Portuguese language which is why it is often associated with Spain and Portugal For example the use of caballerosidad and cavalheirismo to mean only the positive characteristics of machismo is imbued with feudal and colonial connotations relating to colonial power relations This is because the origin of the word resides in feudal Spanish Portuguese descriptions of landlords that reached through and into the colonial era exalts 105 European culture in comparison to the so called Latin American machismo 6 Consequences of a one sided negative depiction Edit Porfirio Rubirosa a Dominican playboy who helped internationalize the concept of the Latin Lover and Macho Researchers are concerned regarding the unbalanced representation of machismo within Latin American cultures and are now focused on creating a balanced representation 6 They have repeatedly pointed out the positive characteristics consistent with machismo or caballerosidad nurturance protection of the family and its honor dignity wisdom hard work responsibility spirituality and emotional connectedness 9 Latin American scholars propose there are really two different constructs within machismo one positive and one negative The negative construct of machismo is based on the traditional Western concept of hyper masculinity Caballerosidad s characteristics are exalted while machismo s characteristics are seen as predominantly negative 6 9 The positive side of machismo caballerosidad cavalheirismo refers to a connection to family and chivalry However the focus on the negative aspects and avoidance of the positive aspects of machismo coincides with the concept of marginalization and powerlessness 106 of Iberian and Latin American and more broadly Romance speaking European culture derived narratives This is because the focus on the negative aspects and the avoidance or ignorance of the positive creates a power dynamic that legitimizes the mainstream American hegemonic idea of masculinity as the correct or more righteous form of masculinity and subjugates machismo as a degenerated form of abuse against women and backwardness As a result it can create a sense of powerlessness within Latino males in their expression of their masculinity 107 108 Even as some researchers have discussed the distinction between positive and negative aspects of machismo something interesting to note is that often when positive characteristics are described those of caballerismo are brought up which is different from machismo The characteristics that are usually captured by society within man often do include aggressiveness power dominance and more However researchers point out that there are positive aspects that are also portrayed in machismo but are often excluded or hidden these would include responsibility honor and bravery which are not always seen 109 To further analyze this for example with a man having responsibility they portray their role to overlook their family and be their protection They also have to continue the family legacy thus honoring their family through generations This however is a trait that could be diminished as could be the case when men seek respect and if they do obtain this respect it could be that they potentially react with aggressiveness which leads into violence and abuse 109 This would then turn a positive characteristic to a negative characteristic of machismo since this act of aggression is externalized and men portray the power they seem to have over women 109 Because of this it is usually the case that the negative perceptions of machismo outweigh the positives The phenomena of gender based belief systems having negative and positive effects is described as ambivalent sexism which is made of hostile sexism and benevolent sexism 110 Academics have noted that there are consequences of only having a negative definition for Iberian and Latin American masculinity in popular literature Researchers have suggested that according to the anti Catholic and or Nordicist views dominant in American culture Latin American manifestations of machismo represent all that is wrong in a man 111 Latino academics have used this argument to explain why Latino male youth struggle in academic institutions and have high rates of criminality 112 These are the same discourses that argue that Latino masculinity machismo is defined by violence recklessness and misogyny Accordingly they link these expressions as contributing to a lack of interest in academics as well as behavioral struggles in schools for Latino male youth 113 Furthermore disengagement from school is recommended to also be a product of masculine work as they often required more dangerous tasks and less skilled work Thus there is less priority given to school work clean work and rather there is a greater emphasis on work that involves a dangerous environment 113 Negative depictions of machismo in popular literature Edit Throughout popular literature the term has continued to be associated with negative characteristics such as sexism misogyny chauvinism hyper masculinity and hegemonic masculinity 114 115 96 Scholars 116 characterize macho men as violent rude womanizing and prone to alcoholism Authors from various disciplines typified macho men as domineering through intimidation seducing and controlling women and controlling children through violence 114 For example in American literature an example of machismo comes from Tennessee Williams character Stanley Kowalski an egotistical brother in law from A Streetcar Named Desire In the play and 1951 film adaptation Stanley epitomizes the tough alpha male hyper masculine archetype socially and physically dominating and imposing his will upon his wife and her sister Blanche Dubois Bound up with Stanley s aggressive and occasionally misogynistic views is a strong sense of pride and honor which leads to his hatred of Blanche In the play A View from the Bridge by Arthur Miller one of the main characters Eddie is a classic type who displays machismo He wants to be the best of the men around him and when beaten becomes very agitated and increasingly irrational The negative stereotypes depicted in American literature are not representative of all the different layers of machismo 117 Although machismo can be portrayed as violent and aggressive throughout popular literature scholars argue that the positive side of machismo which includes its positive aspects is often not shown 118 Graffiti on the street expressing Machismo Kills Machismo in Chile EditMachismo has been studied in the schoperias taverns of the copper mining regions of northern Chile In these venues women are effectively barred as customers and the men who work in the mines cultivate a sense of masculinity that tends to be more boisterous than their work conduct Socializing is facilitated by alcohol consumption and the men many of whom live away from their families demonstrate their heterosexual legitimacy by talking about women s bodies and sexual availability or boasting about their sexual achievements The shyer customers find that they are able to interact with friends and women in ways that they could not do outside for fear of rejection Schoperia owners consider themselves obligated to cater to the customers preferences by hiring young and attractive waitresses and the waitresses must defend against the customers constant attention 119 Miners symbolize the ideal of the male worker hostile to the bosses and to the moral authorities that have over decades tried to mold them into a disciplined and self reproducing work force Workers across the copper industry look to mining as the ultimate test of physical strength and therefore manhood The miners often speak of the mines themselves as a jealous and punishing woman and express fear that their wives are unfaithful Fistfights and lesser acts of protest regularly erupt with the management and to a lesser extent with workers who cross the lines of solidarity 120 Since 2007 every July the Red Chilena Contra la Violencia hacia las Mujeres Chilean Network Against Violence Towards Women implements its campaign Cuidado El Machismo Mata translating to Beware Machismo Kills to raise awareness about violence against women intrafamilial violence and femicide 121 Machismo in Italian culture EditItalian men also exhibit machismo ideals which favor a patriarchal power structure 122 See also Edit Look up machismo in Wiktionary the free dictionary Bro subculture Girly girl Androcentrism Manosphere Men s liberation movement Patriarchy Hypermasculinity Toxic masculinity Masculism Radical feminism Closet homosexualityReferences Edit machismo Merriam Webster Dictionary Retrieved 1 February 2017 Archived 24 December 2013 at the Wayback Machine Un Modelo de Vida A role model in his lifetime Archived from the original on 12 May 2008 Morales Edward S 1996 Gender roles among Latino gay and bisexual men Implications for family and couple relationships In Laird Joan Green Robert Jay eds Lesbians and Gays in Couples and Families A Handbook for Therapists Wiley pp 272 297 ISBN 978 0 7879 0222 3 Zinn Maxine Baca Summer 1982 Chicano Men and Masculinity Journal of Ethnic Studies 10 2 29 44 ProQuest 1300556081 Me lanky Bernadette 2012 Intervention Research Designing Conducting Analyzing and Funding Springer Publishing Co p 68 ISBN 978 0 8261 0957 6 Archived from the original on 25 January 2021 Retrieved 16 November 2020 a b c d e f g Meza Opazo Ramon 23 May 2021 Latino Youth and Machismo Working Towards a More Complex Understanding of Marginalized Masculinities Thesis Torres Jose B 1998 Masculinity and gender roles among Puerto Rican men Machismo on the U S mainland American Journal of Orthopsychiatry 68 1 16 26 doi 10 1037 h0080266 PMID 9494638 Gutmann Matthew 1996 The Meanings of Macho Being a Man in Mexico City Berkeley and London University of California Press a b c Arciniega G Miguel Anderson Thomas C Tovar Blank Zoila G Tracey Terence J G January 2008 Toward a fuller conception of Machismo Development of a traditional Machismo and Caballerismo Scale Journal of Counseling Psychology 55 1 19 33 doi 10 1037 0022 0167 55 1 19 Machismo 1 Irisol Gonzalez irisolgonzalez Retrieved 26 November 2022 Hondagneu Sotelo Pierrette 1994 Gendered Transitions Mexican Experiences of Immigration University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 07513 9 page needed a b Barker Gary Loewenstein Irene December 1997 Where the Boys are Attitudes Related to Masculinity Fatherhood and Violence Toward Women among Low Income Adolescent and Young Adult Males in Rio de Janeiro Brazil Youth amp Society 29 2 166 196 doi 10 1177 0044118X97029002002 S2CID 144983048 Kulis Stephen Marsiglia Flavio Francisco Hecht Michael L March 2002 Gender Labels and Gender Identity as Predictors of Drug Use among Ethnically Diverse Middle School Students Youth amp Society 33 3 442 475 doi 10 1177 0044118X02033003005 PMC 3045088 PMID 21359134 Marsiglia Flavio Franciso Holleran Lori 1999 I ve Learned So Much from My Mother Narrative from a Group of Chicana High School Students Social Work in Education 21 4 220 237 doi 10 1093 cs 21 4 220 Hardin Michael January 2002 Altering Masculinities The Spanish Conquest and the Evolution of the Latin American Machismo International Journal of Sexuality and Gender Studies 7 1 1 22 doi 10 1023 A 1013050829597 S2CID 140349743 Murekian Octavio 28 May 2018 International Body Image and the Issues with Purely Quantitative Marketing Research www toucaninsights com Archived from the original on 30 June 2019 Retrieved 30 June 2019 Padula Alfred 1996 Orlandini Alberto Arenas Reinaldo Clavijo Uva de Aragon Fuentes Ileana Morera Lisette Ortega Victor Joaquin Cabale Manolo Nacianceno Alfonso Montesinos Enrique eds Gender Sexuality and Revolution in Cuba Latin American Research Review 31 2 226 235 doi 10 1017 S0023879100018033 JSTOR 2504037 S2CID 252744664 a b c d Kirk Emily J January 2011 Setting the Agenda for Cuban Sexuality The Role of Cuba s Cenesex Canadian Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Studies 36 72 143 163 doi 10 1080 08263663 2011 10817018 S2CID 143910104 a b c d e Gender Equality and the Role of Women in Cuban Society PDF February 2011 Ferguson Ann 1997 Review of Sex and Revolution Women in Socialist Cuba NWSA Journal 9 2 193 194 JSTOR 4316519 a b c d De La Torre Miguel A 1999 Beyond Machismo A Cuban Case Study The Annual of the Society of Christian Ethics 19 213 233 doi 10 5840 asce19991912 Vangipurapu Ira 2016 Gender Revolution in Socialist Cuba Up to a Certain Point Transcultural Negotiations of Gender pp 93 101 doi 10 1007 978 81 322 2437 2 9 ISBN 978 81 322 2436 5 a b Zaviezo Gabriela 21 July 2016 The New New Man Re Articulations of Masculinity in Post Revolutionary Cuba Thesis Tome Lester August 2017 Swans in Sugarcane Fields Proletarian Ballet Dancers and the Cuban Revolution s Industrious New Man Dance Research Journal 49 2 4 25 doi 10 1017 S0149767717000171 S2CID 194572775 Hutchens Rex R Chilcott John March 1989 The Education of Cuban Women An Analysis of the Politics of Gender OCLC 1064770566 ERIC ED309129 Whitefield Mimi 12 July 2016 Study Cubans don t make much but it s more than state salaries indicate Miami Herald Archived from the original on 1 April 2019 Retrieved 4 December 2018 Gender Data Portal datatopics worldbank org Archived from the original on 16 April 2018 Retrieved 4 December 2018 Hochschild Arlie Russell Machung Anne 1990 The Second Shift Avon Books ISBN 978 0 380 71157 4 page needed a b University Berkley Center for Religion Peace and World Affairs at Georgetown The Truth About Gender Equality in Cuba berkleycenter georgetown edu Archived from the original on 5 December 2018 Retrieved 4 December 2018 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link a b In Cuba a Government Backed LGBT Rights Movement Battles Against a Culture of Machismo Social Justice News Nexus 10 March 2017 Archived from the original on 28 March 2019 Retrieved 5 December 2018 Alvarez Tabio Albo Ana Maria 23 August 2017 General Overview of Cuban Family Law Legislation Florida Journal of International Law 29 1 a b Baron Guy 1 March 2010 The Illusion of Equality Machismo and Cuban Cinema of the Revolution Bulletin of Latin American Research 29 3 354 366 doi 10 1111 j 1470 9856 2010 00383 x Cabranes Grant Leo July 2010 Possession Gender and Performance in Revolutionary Cuba Eugenio Hernandez Espinosa s Maria Antonia Theatre Research International 35 2 126 138 doi 10 1017 S0307883310000040 S2CID 161059893 a b MacBean James Roy Alea Tomas Gutierrez 1 April 1985 A Dialogue with Tomas Gutierrez Alea on the Dialectics of the Spectator in Hasta Cierto Punto Film Quarterly 38 3 22 29 doi 10 1525 fq 1985 38 3 04a00050 Harkonen Heidi 2013 Love Jealousy and Gender in Post Soviet Havana Journal of the Finnish Anthropological Society 38 3 24 32 hdl 10138 333143 Harkonen Heidi 1 June 2015 Negotiating desirability and material resources changing expectations on men in post Soviet Havana Etnografica Revista do Centro em Rede de Investigacao em Antropologia vol 19 2 367 388 doi 10 4000 etnografica 4032 ISSN 0873 6561 Ortiz Gabriela S 2013 The Evolution of Machismo in Puerto Rico PDF Gabriela Sofia Ortiz S2CID 173170677 Archived PDF from the original on 17 May 2018 Retrieved 16 May 2018 unreliable source self published source Moreno Marisel C 2012 Patriarchal Foundations Contesting Gender Sexual Paradigms Family Matters Puerto Rican Women Authors on the Island and the Mainland University of Virginia Press pp 130 168 ISBN 978 0 8139 3333 7 JSTOR j ctt6wrm20 8 Project MUSE chapter 582074 Briggs Laura 2002 Colonialism Familiar Territory Reproducing Empire Race Sex Science and U S Imperialism in Puerto Rico University of California Press pp 1 20 ISBN 978 0 520 22255 7 JSTOR 10 1525 j ctt1pncqs 5 a b Lopez Iris 2008 Gender Awareness across Generations Matters of Choice Puerto Rican Women s Struggle for Reproductive Freedom Rutgers University Press pp 20 42 ISBN 978 0 8135 4372 7 JSTOR j ctt5hj277 6 Mulhere Kaitlin 10 April 2018 Here s the One Place in America Where the Gender Pay Gap Is Reversed Money com Archived from the original on 27 September 2020 Warren Alice Colon 2010 Women s Employment and Changing Gender Relations in Puerto Rico Caribbean Studies 38 2 59 91 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 865 3703 doi 10 1353 crb 2010 0058 JSTOR 41220536 PMID 22073439 S2CID 24781585 Warren Alice E Colon 2003 Puerto Rico Feminism and Feminist Studies Gender and Society 17 5 664 690 doi 10 1177 0891243203256024 JSTOR 3594704 S2CID 145397721 Perez Gina 28 June 2008 Puertorriquenas Rencorosas y Mejicanas Sufridas Gendered Ethnic Identity Formation in Chicago s Latino Communities Journal of Latin American Anthropology 8 2 96 124 doi 10 1525 jlca 2003 8 2 96 a b Negociado de la Policia de Puerto Rico 2021 Incidentes de Violencia de Genero ano 2021 PDF Gobierno de Puerto Rico Oficina de la Procuradora de las Mujeres La Fortaleza Gobierno de Puerto Rico 24 January 2021 Gobernador declara Estado de Emergencia por Violencia de Genero Oficina del Gobernador Retrieved 8 October 2022 Oficina de Estadisticas del Negociado de la Policia de Puerto Rico 27 January 2021 Incidentes de Violencia Domestica por Area Policia Ano 2020 PDF Oficina de la Procuradora de las Mujeres Gobierno de Puerto Rico a b Quiles Cristina del Mar 7 July 2022 Los tribunales ante el machismo Centro de Periodismo Investigativo Retrieved 22 September 2022 a b Torres Nieves Valeria Maria 11 August 2022 Educadoras cuentan como integran la perspectiva de genero en el salon Centro de Periodismo Investigativo Retrieved 29 October 2022 Departamento de Educacion de Puerto Rico 26 October 2022 Carta num 015 2022 2023 PDF Retrieved 29 October 2022 Rapp Linda 2010 Puerto Rico and the Caribbean The Politics of Sexuality in Latin America A Reader on Lesbian Gay Bisexual and Transgender Rights University of Pittsburgh Press pp 135 143 doi 10 2307 j ctt5vkfk6 13 ISBN 978 0 8229 6062 1 JSTOR j ctt5vkfk6 13 Project MUSE chapter 370586 a b Kaur Harmeet Rivera Rafy 2 March 2020 El brutal asesinato de una mujer transgenero conmociona a Puerto Rico y renueva una conversacion sobre la transfobia The brutal murder of a transgender woman shocks Puerto Rico and renews a conversation about transphobia CNN in Spanish Guia de Lenguaje Inclusivo y Antirracista Inclusive and Anti Racist Language Guide in Spanish Mentes Puertorriquenas en Accion 2021 Puerto Rican Identity Gender Roles amp Religion 20 March 2013 Archived from the original on 17 May 2018 Retrieved 16 May 2018 TRT Exclusive Queer and Caribbean LGBTQ Culture amp The Island Identity therainbowtimesmass com 15 December 2017 Archived from the original on 17 May 2018 Retrieved 16 May 2018 Ramirez Tanisha Love 3 September 2015 How Machismo Culture Impacts Gay Latinos Huffington Post Archived from the original on 24 July 2017 Retrieved 16 May 2018 a b Leleim Artem 30 June 2018 Vojna iz za Nikolskoj a nu ka devushki a nu ka parni in Russian Gazeta Ru Rambler Media Group Archived from the original on 18 August 2018 Retrieved 18 March 2021 Goncharova Marina 27 June 2018 Machizm kak on est in Russian NaNevskom ru Archived from the original on 17 October 2021 Retrieved 18 March 2021 Osobennosti reprezentacii koncepta machizm v proizvedeniyah Gabrielya Garsia Markesa Polkovniku nikto ne pishet Hronika obyavlennoj smerti i Vspominaya moih grustnyh shlyuh i ih perevodah na russkij yazyk Thesis in Russian Nauchnyj Korrespondent 29 January 2018 Archived from the original on 17 October 2021 Retrieved 18 March 2021 Pelevin Viktor 13 February 2020 P5 proshalnye pesni politicheskih pigmeev pindostana in Russian Litres ISBN 978 5 457 07366 1 Archived from the original on 17 October 2021 Retrieved 18 March 2021 Glavnye kachki rossijskogo kinematografa in Russian Yandex Zen 14 May 2020 Archived from the original on 17 October 2021 Retrieved 18 March 2021 Lessons in On Line Reference PublishingMerriam Webster s Collegiate Dictionary Merriam WebsterMerriam Webster s Collegiate Thesaurus Merriam WebsterMerriam Webster s Collegiate Encyclopedia Merriam Webster The Library Quarterly 71 3 392 399 July 2001 doi 10 1086 603287 ISSN 0024 2519 S2CID 148183387 a b Oleinik Anton 1 July 2010 Uses and Abuses of Sexuality in Social Interactions Empirical Evidence from Russia Europe Asia Studies 62 5 749 778 doi 10 1080 09668136 2010 481385 ISSN 0966 8136 S2CID 144286542 a b c d e f g Ingoldsby Bron 1991 The Latin American Family Familism vs Machismo Journal of Comparative Family Studies 1 1 57 62 doi 10 3138 jcfs 22 1 57 JSTOR 41602120 a b c Fragoso Jose M Kashubeck Susan 2000 Machismo gender role conflict and mental health in Mexican American men Psychology of Men amp Masculinity 1 2 87 97 doi 10 1037 1524 9220 1 2 87 a b c Nunez Alicia Gonzalez Patricia Talavera Gregory A Sanchez Johnsen Lisa Roesch Scott C Davis Sonia M Arguelles William Womack Veronica Y Ostrovsky Natania W 2016 Machismo marianismo and negative cognitive emotional factors Findings from the Hispanic Community Health Study Study of Latinos Sociocultural Ancillary Study Journal of Latina o Psychology 4 4 202 217 doi 10 1037 lat0000050 PMC 5102330 PMID 27840779 Cespedes Yolanda M Huey Stanley J 2008 Depression in Latino adolescents A cultural discrepancy perspective Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology 14 2 168 172 doi 10 1037 1099 9809 14 2 168 PMC 2493609 PMID 18426290 a b c O Neil James M 1981 Male Sex Role Conflicts Sexism and Masculinity Psychological Implications for Men Women and the Counseling Psychologist The Counseling Psychologist 9 2 61 80 doi 10 1177 001100008100900213 S2CID 145579181 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Helms Barbara J 1986 Gender Role Conflict Scale College Men s Fear of Femininity Sex Roles 14 5 6 doi 10 1007 bf00287583 S2CID 145208831 a b Pandel Hannah 10 February 2016 Healthy competition Is Good For Children IPA The Voice For Freedom Archived from the original on 28 February 2018 Retrieved 27 February 2018 Adler Leonore Loeb 1995 Violence and the prevention of violence Westport Connecticut Greenwood Publishing Group ISBN 978 0 275 94873 3 Archived from the original on 17 October 2021 Retrieved 16 November 2020 Walker Julian 2005 The Maudsley Violence Questionnaire initial validation and reliability Personality and Individual Differences 38 1 187 201 doi 10 1016 j paid 2004 04 001 a b c d e f g Cianelli Rosina Ferrer Lilian McElmurry Beverly 2008 HIV Prevention and Low Income Chilean Women Machismo Marianismo and HIV Misconceptions Culture Health amp Sexuality 10 3 297 306 doi 10 1080 13691050701861439 JSTOR 20461006 PMC 2603075 PMID 18432428 a b c d e Resnick R P Yolanda Quinones Mayo 1996 The Impact of Machismo on Hispanic Women Affilia 11 3 257 277 doi 10 1177 088610999601100301 S2CID 144747251 Sharpe Mark J Heppner P Paul Dixon Wayne A July 1995 Gender role conflict instrumentality expressiveness and well being in adult men Sex Roles 33 1 2 1 18 doi 10 1007 BF01547932 S2CID 144209586 Blazina Chris Watkins C Edward October 1996 Masculine gender role conflict Effects on college men s psychological well being chemical substance usage and attitudes towards help seeking Journal of Counseling Psychology 43 4 461 465 doi 10 1037 0022 0167 43 4 461 a b c d e f g h i Asencio Marysol 2011 Locas Respect and Masculinity Gender and Society 25 3 335 354 doi 10 1177 0891243211409214 S2CID 144389570 Sears Jacqueline L 2006 Machismo as a Determinant for HIV STD Risk Behavior Among Latino MSM VCU Scholars Compass Archived from the original on 28 February 2018 Retrieved 27 February 2018 a b c Paredes Americo 1979 The United States Mexico and Machismo RSA Journ 1 1 17 37 doi 10 2307 3814061 JSTOR 3814061 Ryder Richard 1993 Violence and machismo RSA Journal 5443 5443 706 717 JSTOR 41376268 a b Tracey Terence G Miguel Arciniega Thomas C Anderson Zoila G Tovar Blank 2008 Toward a Fuller Conception of Machismo Development of a Traditional Machismo and Caballerismo Scale Journal of Counseling Psychology 55 19 33 doi 10 1037 0022 0167 55 1 19 Owen Jesse Glass Jon 2010 Latino fathers The relationship among machismo acculturation ethnic identity and paternal involvement Psychology of Men amp Masculinity 11 4 251 261 doi 10 1037 a0021477 S2CID 144489189 a b c d Donaldson Mike 2009 Migrant Men Critical studies of masculinities and the migration experience New York Routledge pp 122 123 210 213 ISBN 978 1 135 84624 4 Masterson Mark 15 November 2013 Hubbard Thomas K ed Studies of Ancient Masculinity A Companion to Greek and Roman Sexualities Chichester UK John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 17 30 doi 10 1002 9781118610657 ch2 ISBN 978 1 118 61065 7 retrieved 29 November 2022 Amazon Warriors Did Indeed Fight and die Like Men 29 October 2014 Archived from the original on 29 July 2019 Retrieved 29 July 2019 Archived copy PDF Archived PDF from the original on 15 February 2019 Retrieved 30 July 2019 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link 1 Samuel 8 3 and 2 Samuel 1 26 a b c Mirande Alredo 1979 A Reinterpretation of Male Dominance in the Chicano Family The Family Coordinator 28 4 473 479 doi 10 2307 583507 JSTOR 583507 Riddell Sosa 1974 Chicanos and el movimiento Aztlan 5 4 155 165 JSTOR 583507 Newhall Amy 2009 The changing realities of work and family a multidisciplinary approach Malden MA John Wiley amp Sons p 90 ISBN 978 1 4443 0528 9 a b Intindola Melissa L Jacobson Ryan P Jacobson Kathryn J L DelCampo Robert G June 2016 Machismo in Organizations Individual Predictors amp Context Dependent Outcomes Employee Responsibilities and Rights Journal 28 2 113 131 doi 10 1007 s10672 015 9274 5 S2CID 146571603 a b Dotti Sani Giulia M Quaranta Mario July 2017 The Best Is Yet to Come Attitudes Toward Gender Roles Among Adolescents in 36 Countries Sex Roles 77 1 2 30 45 doi 10 1007 s11199 016 0698 7 hdl 2434 625843 S2CID 151544032 a b Matsuda Yui 4 May 2017 Actor Partner Interdependence Model Analysis of Sexual Communication and Relationship Family Planning Factors Among Immigrant Latino Couples in the United States Health Communication 32 5 612 620 doi 10 1080 10410236 2016 1160317 PMC 5253322 PMID 27367797 Rueda Heidi Adams Williams Lela Rankin 2016 Mexican American Adolescent Couples Communicating About Conflict Journal of Adolescent Research 31 3 375 403 doi 10 1177 0743558415584999 S2CID 145457639 Sanchez Delida Whittaker Tiffany A Hamilton Emma Arango Sarah 2017 Familial ethnic socialization gender role attitudes and ethnic identity development in Mexican origin early adolescents Cultural Diversity and Ethnic Minority Psychology 23 3 335 347 doi 10 1037 cdp0000142 PMID 28230388 S2CID 20692587 a b Mosher D Tompkins S 1988 Scripting the macho man Hypermasculine socialization and enculturation Journal of Sex Research 25 60 84 doi 10 1080 00224498809551445 Enck Wanzer Darrel 2010 The Young Lords A Reader New York and London New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 2242 8 pg 10 Enck Wanzer Darrel 2010 The Young Lords A Reader New York and London New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 2242 8 pg 9 13 Palante 8 May 1970 volume 2 number 2 Palante June 1971 volume 2 number 11 Enck Wanzer Darrel 2010 The Young Lords A Reader New York and London New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 2242 8 pg 33 Enck Wanzer Darrel 2010 The Young Lords A Reader New York and London New York University Press ISBN 978 0 8147 2242 8 pg 33 Mignolo Walter 2000 Local Histories Global Designs Coloniality Subaltern Knowledges and Border Thinking Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00140 1 page needed Alcoff Linda Martin June 2005 Latino vs Hispanic The politics of ethnic names Philosophy amp Social Criticism 31 4 395 407 doi 10 1177 0191453705052972 S2CID 144267416 Thobani Sunera 2007 Exalted Subjects Studies in the Making of Race and Nation in Canada University of Toronto Press pp 2 29 257 266 ISBN 978 1 4426 9152 0 Young Iris Marion 2000 Five Faces of Oppression In Adams Maurianne Blumenfeld Warren J Castaneda Rosie Hackman Heather W Peters Madeline L Zuniga Ximena eds Readings for Diversity and Social Justice Psychology Press pp 35 49 ISBN 978 0 415 92634 8 Connell R W 1995 Masculinities University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 08999 0 page needed Mignolo Walter 2000 Local Histories Global Designs Coloniality Subaltern Knowledges and Border Thinking Princeton University Press ISBN 978 0 691 00140 1 page needed a b c Perilla Julia L May 1999 Domestic Violence as a Human Rights Issue The Case of Immigrant Latinos Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences 21 2 107 133 doi 10 1177 0739986399212001 S2CID 145554405 Glick Peter Fiske Susan T 1997 Hostile and Benevolent Sexism Psychology of Women Quarterly 21 119 35 doi 10 1111 j 1471 6402 1997 tb00104 x S2CID 53683112 Adams Carlos 2006 Machismo and geographies of hope Thesis hdl 2376 548 OCLC 71046468 Caravantes Ernesto 2006 Clipping Their Own Wings The Incompatibility Between Latino Culture and American Education Hamilton Books ISBN 978 0 7618 3536 3 page needed a b Slutskaya Natasha Simpson Ruth Hughes Jason Simpson Alexander Uygur Selcuk March 2016 Masculinity and Class in the Context of Dirty Work Gender Work amp Organization 23 2 165 182 doi 10 1111 gwao 12119 a b Anders G 1993 Machismo Dead or alive Hispanic 3 14 20 Ingoldsby B 1991 The Latin American Family Familism vs Machismo Journal of Comparative Family Studies 1 57 64 doi 10 3138 jcfs 22 1 57 Mhof D 1979 Macho Sit on It Miami 3L Graphics Arciniega G Miguel Anderson Thomas C Tovar Blank Zoila G Tracey Terence J G January 2008 Toward a fuller conception of Machismo Development of a traditional Machismo and Caballerismo Scale Journal of Counseling Psychology 55 1 19 33 doi 10 1037 0022 0167 55 1 19 ISSN 1939 2168 Katz Ani 8 January 2020 Top 10 books about toxic masculinity The Guardian Retrieved 29 November 2022 Barrientos Delgado Jaime Salinas Meruane Paulina Rojas Varas Pablo Meza Opazo Patricio 1 October 2011 Gender relations and masculinity in northern Chile mining areas ethnography in schoperias Etnografica 15 3 413 440 doi 10 4000 etnografica 1013 Klubock Thomas Miller 1996 Working Class Masculinity Middle Class Morality and Labor Politics in the Chilean Copper Mines Journal of Social History 30 2 435 463 doi 10 1353 jsh 30 2 435 JSTOR 3789388 http www nomasviolenciacontramujeres cl cuidad el machismo mata Archived 6 August 2020 at the Wayback Machine Spanish Ruffa Chiara Raffaelli Rosa 18 February 2011 Opinion Enough Machismo Italian Style The New York Times Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Machismo amp oldid 1169086589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.