Dominasi Maskulinitas dalam Militer: Analisis Konstruksi Budaya terhadap Gender dalam Militer melalui Film Perang

Putiviola Elian Nasir

Abstract

The issue of femininity and masculinity has long been a source of controversy, specifically when tied to positions of power, rights and obligations. Many will argue that masculinity dominates those positions of power, one of them being the military. It is an undeniable fact that the number of women soldiers is far below men soldiers. This is almost a universal trend. Using Joshua S. Goldstein’s third hypothesis of “tough men and tender women”, this research attempts to analyze the cultural construction of gender in the military that is present in four war movies dating back from 1957 to a more current one of 2008. The result of this research shows that although there has been a shift in what is considered as acceptable for masculinity, femininity still cannot escape its stereotype.

Full Text:

PDF

References

Bajali, Murali. “Owning Black Masculinity: The Intersection of Cultural Commodification and Self-Construction in Rap Music Video,” Communication, Culture and Critique 2 (2009): 21.

Burr, Valerie. 1995. Introduction to Social Construction. London: Routledge.

Detraz, Nicole. 2012. International Security and Gender. Cambridge: Polity Press.

Eschholz, Susandan Jane Bufkin, “Crime in the Movies – Investigating the Efficacy of Measure of Both Sex and Gender in Predicting Victimization and Offending in Film,” Sociological Forum, Vol. 6, No. 4 (2001): 656

Fry, D. P. dan A. H. Gabriel. “Preface: The Cultural Construction of Gender and Aggression,” Sex Roles Vol 3 (1994): 165-167

Gaut, Berys. 1997. “Analytic Philosophy of Film: History, Issues, Prospect,” Analytic Philosophy 38, no. 3: 145, 147-151.

Goldstein, Joshua S. 2001. War and Gender. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.

Sargent, James D. 2005. “Smoking in Movies: Impact on Adolescent Smoking.” Adolescent Med 16: 345-370

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.