Nature : Nurture

I have a couple bits of news/theories for the “Beyond John Wayne” category but I’ll keep them brief in favor of other forthcoming TealArt posts.

First off this Beyond John Wayne category is more than a year old now. I’m looking back at this last year plus and thinking, “my god, I’ve learned and changed a lot.” This gender studies/masculinity project thing that I’m forever enthralled with has gone from being a “what does it mean to be gay in the world today, to a what does it mean to be a man in the world today, to a combination of the two: this is the whole “Beyond John Wayne” idea, that it’s possible to be a man outside of “the man box” to some sort of weird where I am now place. I think more reflection on this transition is defiantly required, but that’s fairly low on my list right now.

Having given it a suitable breathing period, I’m going to go back and edit/rewrite/revise my proposal for the Affinity Story Project (I really need a better name, don’t I?) and see what I can come up with. It’s something concrete and something real, and it feels good to finally be working on something like this.

The third, and probably most important reason why I made this post is to express the following theoretical statement (which in typical form is a question) that I scribbled on the back of a paper in class today:

Is the claim that the differences between men and women arenatural, oppressive because “nature” is used as a tool for justifying the non-egalitarian distribution of opportunity and resources, or because of the nature/nurture dichotomy/opposition is inherently gendered.

Actually I wrote “is nature oppressive because it’s a (tool for) justifying “different but equal” or because of the nature/nurture dichotomy/opposition.” With the parenthetical written in the super-text. You be the judge of what makes more sense and is more coherent.

I’d explain more, but I’m not really in the mood for answers now.

tycho garen 17 September 2004