The Glass Phallus: Pub(lic) Masculinity and Drinking in Rural New Zealand*

2000 Rural Sociology 240 citations

Abstract

Abstract In this article I report the findings of an ethnographic study of men's pub drinking in rural New Zealand. By using the idea of hegemonic masculinity and incorporating theoretical ideas of gender performativity, the analysis focuses on aspects of drinking performance that are central to the establishment of hegemony by a particular version of masculinity in this community. Two important characteristics of pub drinking performance are conversational cockfighting and the disciplines of drinking. These combine to ensure that a particular version of masculinity, here called pub(lic) masculinity , is able to reproduce itself. A further finding is that masculinity in this kind of performative situation develops a degree of invisibility. Using the metaphor of the “glass phallus,” I engage with the difficulties of analyzing an invisible masculinity and argue that rendering masculinity visible is an important task for any sociological analysis of both public leisure sites in rural society and the embodied performance of alcohol consumption by men in public spaces.

Keywords

MasculinityPerformative utteranceGender studiesSociologyHegemonic masculinityHuman sexualityAestheticsArt

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Publication Info

Year
2000
Type
article
Volume
65
Issue
4
Pages
562-581
Citations
240
Access
Closed

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Hugh Campbell (2000). The Glass Phallus: Pub(lic) Masculinity and Drinking in Rural New Zealand*. Rural Sociology , 65 (4) , 562-581. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1549-0831.2000.tb00044.x

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DOI
10.1111/j.1549-0831.2000.tb00044.x