Tuesday, 5 August 2014

Can Palestinian Men be Victims? Gendering Israel's War on Gaza

"Today, we should be aware of how the trope of “womenandchildren” is circulating in relation to Gaza and to Palestine more broadly. This trope accomplishes many discursive feats, two of which are most prominent: The massifying of women and children into an undistinguishable group brought together by the “sameness” of gender and sex, and the reproduction of the male Palestinian body (and the male Arab body more generally) as always already dangerous."

http://www.jadaliyya.com/pages/index/18644/can-palestinian-men-be-victims-gendering-israels-w

Tuesday, 29 July 2014

Sportsmen Crying - Liam Davie

A beautiful thing, Liam Davie crying at the Commonwealth men gymnastic team competition.  An example of strong men crying as a result of wanting something so much.  Apparently there is a 'rule' for men crying in sports, someone shake this guy who wrote this article!

http://uk.askmen.com/sports/fanatic_250/273_the-rules-for-crying-in-sports.html

Thankfully there is a clever man called Professor Cooper who has commented on the subject of sportsmen crying with a tad more insight:


"I think it was Gascoigne who reallyopened the way for other men to cry," said Cary Cooper, professor of organisational psychology and health at Lancaster University. "We know that men don't express their feelings as well as women. I think for men to cry in competitive, aggressive, macho sports like football is quite healthy.
"It's an expression of emotion and people aren't ashamed of doing it anymore. You're seeing a physical, outward manifestation of what someone is actually feeling inside, without disguising it and trying to play the part of a macho man. That's what I like about it, provided people don't start crying just because it's the done thing."
Professor Cooper, who as a Manchester City supporter clearly knows a thing or two about the subject, believes Britain has shown the way in the crying game. "Fifteen or 20 years ago we led pretty stable lives, a nine-to-five culture. Now we lead much more frenetic lives and people areso much more ambitious and achievement-driven. We've been Americanised. Everything is about winning.
"I think that has led us into feeling more pressure. And given the freneticway that we lead our lives we don't have time to express our emotions, until something goes wrong. Then we can't control it because it's overwhelming. It's like a pressure cooker. It just boils over."

Sunday, 13 July 2014

The Quiet Man Suite Trailer

Wow... amazing film

'Catharsis' features a world where locking away feelings is easier than dealing with them. But when the pressure builds is an explosion of emotion inevitable?

'Catharsis' is one of six dance films that form The Quiet Man Suite.

http://boysdancing.org/gallery/catharsis