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Journal Article

Citation

McDowell AD. Gender Soc. 2017; 31(2): 223-244.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, SAGE Publishing)

DOI

10.1177/0891243217694824

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

This research uses Christian Hardcore punk to show how evangelical Christian men respond to changes in gender relations that threaten hegemonic masculinity through a music subculture. Drawing on interviews and participant observations of live music shows, I find that Christian Hardcore ministry involves a hybrid mix of aggressive and loving performances of manhood. Christian Hardcore punk men fortify the idea that men and women are essentially opposites through discourse and the segregation of music spaces, even as they deviate from dominant ideas of what makes a man in their strategy of openly expressing the "loving" of secular men. The mechanism for this is the interactions in concert spaces. These findings offer a conceptual move away from studying "godly" masculinity as intrinsically distinct from secular masculinity and illustrate how religious masculinities can be both hegemonic and "soft."


Language: en

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