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Tuesday, 25 March 2008
Pseudsday Tuesday Bookmark and Share

It is noticeable these days that many abstract words have sprouted plurals. "Competences" is one such. You also see "competencies". I dislike both of these. "Competence" is a good, plain, singular word. It doesn't hunt in packs. "Competences" and "competencies" are used by the linguistically incompetent, not to say incontinent.

Today's Pseudsday Tuesday comes from Australia - from Murdoch University, to be precise. Is this anything to do with Rupert Murdoch, owner of The Sun? If so, coupled with the fact that it is in Australia, you would expect its students to use plain English: words like "strewth" and "sport" and "g'day". Not Dr Helen Hatchell, who has turned plural abstractions into a fine art in her study of "Masculinities and Whiteness: The Shaping of Adolescent Male Students' Subjectivities in an Australian Boys' School". Silly plural abstracts are coloured red:

In my thesis I explore way in which adolescent male students negotiate and interrogate discursive ideologies relating to hegemonic masculinities and to the normality of "whiteness", specifically within one English classroom in an Australian private single sex boys’ school in Perth, Western Australia.  A feminist poststructuralist theoretical framework is employed to explore how gendered and racialized positions available to adolescent males contribute to the shaping of their subjectivities, and how the social constructions of masculinities and femininities contribute to the ways in which adolescent males represent themselves. A quantitative approach, which included individual classroom observations, questionnaires and interviews, provided me with tools essential for examining the complexities of the effects of social constructs such as gender, sexuality and ethnicity on masculinist positionings at school.  The study reveals the complexities surrounding discourses of hegemonic heterosexual masculinities and privileges of whiteness on the situationally specific formation and negotiation of subjectivities in adolescent males’ lives in one school.
 
Central findings of the study show that adolescent males in this single sex boys’ school easily maintained socially constructed ideas surrounding the feminisation of females and masculinization of males, with notions of homophobia embedded in discourses of hegemonic masculinities. A resistance to alternative masculine discourses shows the impact and maintenance of hegemonic heterosexual masculinities for adolescent males.  However, through the use of particular texts, female teachers in the all boys’ classroom were able to open up spaces for male students to interrogate hegemonic forms of masculinities, to interrogate power relationships, and to access alternative masculinities.  In a similar vein, my findings show how easy it is for students to ignore social injustices in relation to racism and stereotyping of Indigenous Australians, and to retain notions that reinforce these injustices. 

Alternative masculinities? What happened to good old fagging, roasting and buggery behind the bike shed?  These embedded discourse malarkies wouldn't go down well in the beds of Eton.

Posted on 03/25/2008 6:33 PM by Mary Jackson
Comments
25 Mar 2008
Send an emailEnoch
Good Lord, what a load of horseshit that is!

25 Mar 2008
Hugh Fitzgerald
Can Helen Hatchell be arrested and tried very very quickly and then given a life sentence, for crimes against thinking humanity? And can the Australian authorities make sure that her prison library contains only Shakespeare, the KJV, and Dickens?

25 Mar 2008
Hugh Fitzgerald

Perhaps it is all a joke.�Animated by a Sokalian-like��desire to expose, or like that Australian man who wrote, and won prizes,�not for being an original�writer, but�for being�an aboriginal writer, and a woman to boot.

But then, perhaps it isn't a joke. What do I know about such things? I'm an American, and a woman to boot.



25 Mar 2008
Send an emailMary Jackson

Can�Helen Hatchell�be arrested and tried very very quickly and then given a life sentence...

In the old days we used to ship 'em to the Colonies. We called it "transportation", which is what suffixicated Americans call "transport". But�if they're in the Colonies already, where d'ya ship 'em?

I'm an American.��

No worries, mate. It's not your fault.



25 Mar 2008
Hugh Fitzgerald

Though prisoners were sent, circa 1733, with Oglethorpe to found the colony of Georgia, others were sent not indiscriminately "to the Colonies" but especially, after Botany Bay and Watkins Tench and the rest of it, mainly to Australia, Australia, Australia. Think Magwitch. And my point merely sharpens your point.

We'll have to think of some other lock-up for Helen Hatchell. The Moskovskiye Vedomosti (Moscow News) recently announced that the Putin regime has been opening up some�of the old Siberian resorts. Magadan is no doubt open for business. And it's on a straight line, as the crow flies northward, from Sydney.



25 Mar 2008
Send an emailgreenmamba
I'm an American, and a woman to boot.

You must get over your inferiority complexities.

26 Mar 2008
Hugh Fitzgerald

"get over your inferiority complexities" [sic] -- a comment�above

Yes, I know. I'm in the eighth year of a well-regarded doctoral program in Self-Esteem Studies. I passed my generals two years ago with flying colors, and I am currently A.B.D. All But Dissertation. It's just so hard to write. I keep doing more and more research. Must be because I am still so unsure of myself, and lack confidence. I'll let you know when I finally hand it in and get the degree. You can come to the ceremony.



29 Mar 2008
Send an emailRichard
'Equalities' is very common in the UK. Yuk!!




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