The Organizational Construction of Hegemonic Masculinity: The Case of the US Navy

1996 Gender Work and Organization 513 citations

Abstract

This article examines the construction of hegemonic masculinity within the US Navy. Based on life history interviews with 27 male officers, this study explores alternative discourses and identities of officers from three different communities in the Navy: aviation, surface warfare, and the supply corps. Definitions of masculinity are relationally constructed through associations of difference: aviators tend to draw upon themes of autonomy and risk taking; surface warfare officers draw upon themes of perseverance and endurance; and supply officers draw upon themes of technical rationality. Further, these masculinities depend upon various contrasting definitions of femininity. Finally, this article explores a series of contradictions that threaten the secure construction of masculinity within this military culture.

Keywords

MasculinityNavyHegemonic masculinityFemininityHegemonyRationalitySociologyGender studiesAutonomyAviationPolitical scienceEngineeringLawPolitics

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Publication Info

Year
1996
Type
article
Volume
3
Issue
3
Pages
129-142
Citations
513
Access
Closed

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Frank J. Barrett (1996). The Organizational Construction of Hegemonic Masculinity: The Case of the US Navy. Gender Work and Organization , 3 (3) , 129-142. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1468-0432.1996.tb00054.x

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DOI
10.1111/j.1468-0432.1996.tb00054.x