Tell a man that he's not man enough
and he may exhibit extremely macho behavior to compensate,
new study findings suggest.
In general,
men in our society are very invested in maintaining a
masculine identity, study author Robb Willer, a PhD candidate
in sociology at Cornell University stated.
When their
masculinity is threatened, they overcompensate, he said.
The idea of masculine overcompensation
is not new. With roots in Freudian psychology, the concept
has been popularly accepted as true, but not necessarily
proven, according to Willer.
The current
findings suggest that it actually does have some empirical
validity, he said.
In the
fall of 2004, 111 male and female undergraduate students
at Cornell completed gender identity surveys, in which
they rated themselves on a number of traditionally male
and female traits, such as assertiveness, forcefulness
and yielding. Willer then gave the students random feedback,
although the students believed the feedback was genuinely
based on their survey responses.
Some men
were told that their survey responses were indicative
of a female identity and others were told the opposite.
The same was true for women, who were used as the comparison
group.
Preference
for SUVs increased
Afterwards, Willer had the students complete
a survey that examined their attitudes about certain masculine
concepts, including homophobia, purchase of a sport-utility
vehicle and support for the Iraq war.
Men whose
masculinity was threatened who were told that their initial
survey responses were more feminine than masculine tended
to overcompensate for it in the second survey by expressing
more homophobia, a higher level of support for the Iraq
war and a greater interest in buying an SUV as opposed
to other types of vehicles, Willer reports. These men
also reported more feelings of shame, guilt, upset and
hostility than did those whose masculinity was not threatened.
Also,
after the first survey, Willer had the students show a
public display of strength holding a handgrip closed for
a certain amount of time. There was no difference, however,
in physical strength between masculinity-threatened men
and masculinity-confirmed men.
Women
apparently didn't care about their identity rating.
Those who were told that their survey responses were more
masculine than feminine did not show any feminine overcompensation,
Willer said.
Results
of the study offer strong support for the masculine overcompensation
thesis, according to Willer's report. He is expected to
present his findings early next week during the annual
meeting of the American Sociological Association.
In future
research, Willer wants to examine whether masculinity
is associated with attitudes on violence toward women.
He also wants to replicate the current study in order
to determine whether men's testosterone levels, to be
measured via a saliva sample, may be an intervening factor
between men's insecurity about their masculinity and
masculine overcompensation.
Reference
Source 89
November
4, 2005