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Men′s Friendships PDF

257 Pages·1992·12.786 MB·English
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Men's Friendships RESEARCH ON MEN AND MASCULINITIES SERIES Series Editor: MICHAEL S. KIMMEL, SUNY Stony Brook Contemporary research on men and masculinity, informed by recent feminist thought and intellectual breakthroughs of women's studies and the women's movement, treats masculinity not as a normative referent but as a problematic gender construct. This series of interdisciplinary, edited volumes attempts to understand men and masculinity through this lens, providing a comprehensive understanding of gender and gender relationships in the contemporary world. EDITORIAL ADVISORY BOARD Maxine Baca Zinn Bob Blauner Robert Brannon Harry Brod Cynthia Cockburn R. W. Connell Jeff Hearn Clyde Franklin II Martin P. Levine Gregory Herek William Marsiglio Robert A. Lewis David Morgan Michael A. Messner Joseph H. Pleck Virginia Ε. O'Leary Robert Staples Victor Seidler Volumes in this Series 1. Steve Craig (ed.) MEN, MASCULINITY, AND THE MEDIA 2. Peter M. Nardi (ed.) MEN'S FRIENDSHIPS Other series volumes in preparation Men's Friendships Edlted by Peter M. Nardl SAGE PUBLICATIONS International Educational and Professional Publisher Newbury Park London New Delhi Copyright © 1992 by Sage Publications, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or utilized in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photo­ copying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher. For information address: SAGE Publications, Inc. <§ 2455 Teller Road Newbury Park, California 91320 SAGE Publications Ltd. 6 Bonhill Street London EC2A 4PU United Kingdom SAGE Publications India Pvt. Ltd. M-32 Market Greater Kailash I New Delhi 110 048 India Printed in the United States of America Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Men's friendships / edited by Peter M. Nardi. p. cm. — (research on men and masculinities; 2) Includes bibliographical references and index. ISBN 0-8039-3773-3. — ISBN 0-8039-3774-1 (pbk.) l.Men—Psychology. 2. Masculinity (Psychology) 3. Friendship- Sociological aspects. 4. Men—Family relationships. 5. Men— Social networks. 6. Homosexuality, Male—Psychological aspects. I. Nardi, Peter M. II. Series. HQ1090.M47 1992 302.3'4'081—dc20 91-45060 CIP 93 94 95 96 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 Sage Production Editor: Judith L. Hunter Contents Foreword vii MICHAEL S. KIMMEL 1. "Seamless Souls": An Introduction to Men's Friendships 1 PETER M. NARDI Part One: Perspectives on Men's Friendships 2. Rejection, Vulnerability, and Friendship 15 VICTOR J. SEIDLER 3. "Our Eyes Behold Each Other": Masculinity and Intimate Friendship in Antebellum New England 35 KAREN V. HANSEN Part Two: Friendship and Social Structural Variations 4. The Spatial Foundations of Men's Friendships and Men's Power 59 DAPHNE SPAIN 5. Men in Networks: Private Communities, Domestic Friendships 74 BARRY WELLMAN 6. Men's Families, Men's Friends: A Structural Analysis of Constraints on Men's Social Ties 115 THEODORE F. COHEN 7. Self-Disclosure in Men's Friendships: Variations Associated with Intimate Relations 132 HELEN M. REID and GARY ALAN FINE 8. Men's Friendships with Women: Intimacy, Sexual Boundaries, and the Informant Role 153 SCOTT O. SWAIN Part Three: Cultural Diversity in Men's Friendships 9. Sex, Friendship, and Gender Roles Among Gay Men 173 PETER M. NARDI 10. The Relationship Between Male-Male Friendship and Male-Female Marriage: American Indian and Asian Comparisons 186 WALTER L. WILLIAMS 11. "Hey, Home—Yo, Bro": Friendship Among Black Men 201 CLYDE W. FRANKLIN II 12. Like Family: Power, Intimacy, and Sexuality in Male Athletes'Friendships 215 MICHAEL A. MESSNER Index 239 About the Contributors 243 Foreword This volume is the second volume in the Sage Series on Research on Men and Masculinity. The purpose of the series is to gather together the finest empirical research in the social sciences that focuses on the experiences of men in contemporary society. Following the pioneering research of feminist scholars over the past two decades, social scientists have come to recognize gender as one of the primary axes around which social life is organized. Gender is now seen as equally central as class and race, both at the macro, structural level of the allocation and distribution of rewards in a hierarchical society, and at the micro, psychological level of individual identity formation and interpersonal interaction. Social scientists distinguish gender from sex. Sex refers to biology, the biological dimorphic division of male and female; gender refers to the cultural meanings that are attributed to those biological differences. While biological sex varies little, the cultural meanings of gender vary enormously. Thus we speak of gender as socially constructed, the defini­ tions of masculinity and femininity as the products of the interplay among a variety of social forces. In particular, we understand gender to vary spatially (from one culture to another); temporally (within any one culture over historical time); and longitudinally (through any individual's life course). Finally, we understand that different groups within any culture may define masculinity and femininity differently, according to subcul­ tural definitions; race, ethnicity, age, class, sexuality, and region of the VII viii Men's Friendships country all affect our different gender definitions. Thus it is more accurate to speak of "masculinities" and "femininities" than to posit a monolithic gender construct. It is the goal of this series to explore the varieties of men's experiences, remaining mindful of specific differences among men, and also aware of the mechanisms of power that inform both men's re­ lations with women and men's relations with other men. Men's friendships are a recurrent theme in discussions of men's lives. How are men's friendships different from women's friendships? What are the obstacles to intimacy between men? What are the key features of men's friendships? How do men's friendships vary among different groups of men? Why does friendship seem so difficult for men to sustain? These are the questions that inform Peter Nardi's collection, Men's Friendships. The authors in the collection use a variety of methods— historical inquiry, psychoanalysis, network analysis, feminist theory— to explore the dynamics and meanings of friendship in men's lives. Several authors detail the ways in which different groups of men, such as black men, gay men, and athletes, manifest different patterns of friendships, and how some of these might be useful to other men in expanding their own friendships. Several of these articles also shed some light on the recent popular interest in "male bonding," a more temporally limited experience of male- male intimacy in the context of retrieving a mythic "deep" masculinity. In this regard, Spain's article serves as a valuable cautionary tale. In her survey of the anthropological literature, she finds that those cultures in which male bonding rituals are most evident and ritually important are also the cultures in which women's status is lowest. Thus any consideration of male friendships must remain aware that such relationships take place not in the seemingly neutral zone of homosocial intimacy, but are simultaneously played out against a broader canvas of male-female relationships. Even in our most emotionally vulnerable revelations, our experiences with other men are still structured by power and privilege. MICHAEL S. KIMMEL Series Editor 1 "Seamless Souls" An Introduction to Men's Friendships PETER M. NARDI When Montaigne described friendship as "souls that mingle and blend with each other so completely that they efface the seam that joined them," he was talking about his friendship with another man. The images of friendships in both myth and everyday life were historically male-dominated. They were characterized in terms of bravery, loyalty, duty, and heroism (see Hammond & Jablow, 1987). This explains why women were often seen as not capable of having "true" friendships. But today the images of ideal friendship are often expressed in terms of women's traits: intimacy, trust, caring, and nurturing, thereby excluding the more traditional men from true friendship (see Sapadin, 1988). Attempts to alter how men construct their friendships on a wider cultural level involve major shifts in the way men's roles are structured and orga­ nized. For one, friendships between men in terms of intimacy and emo­ tional support inevitably introduce—in ways they never had done be­ fore—questions about homosexuality. As Rubin (1985, p. 103) found in her interviews with men: "The association of friendship with homo­ sexuality is so common among men." For women, there is a much longer history of close connections with other women, so that the separation of the emotional from the erotic is more easily made. Lehne (1989) has argued that homophobia has limited the discus­ sion of loving male relationships and has led to the denial by men of the real importance of their friendships with other men. In addition, "the open expression of emotion and affection by men is limited by 1

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