Miss Neecerie said:How manly of them!
Not manly, just not part of fashion. I've heard women complaining about other women with fake breasts while they are wearing 10 pounds of make-up. It's all phony.
Miss Neecerie said:How manly of them!
mattfink said:Not manly, just not part of fashion. I've heard women complaining about other women with fake breasts while they are wearing 10 pounds of make-up. It's all phony.
There is a cultural dissonance. One could even go so far to call it a cultural prejudice. Certainly, if one were to list which factors determine sexual roles, outside of the obvious physical ones, one of the first to spring to anyone's lips is that women wear make-up and men do not.Miss Neecerie said:my point was...a women in no makeup is not by default manly (unless she exhibits more then one indicator)
so why is a man in makeup by default womanly or 'not a man' or whatever it keeps getting called...?
Odalisque said:Now why, when the roles are switched, does a man become unmanly if he prefers to wear make-up, his wife's pants and shave his legs regularly?
As LizzieMaine noted, makeup on a man should not assume stereotypical proportions..MisterCairo said:Two words:
Boy George.
LizzieMaine said:I think the stumbling block for a lot of people is when you say "make up" people immediately think of *feminine* makeup -- and the image they get is of a man going around with lipstick, eye shadow, tweezed eyebrows, powder, and all the rest. As has been said, that automatically would put one, in our culture, outside the norm, no matter what the context. The image that comes to mind for me is the guy from "Cabaret," which is not an image one associates with "masculinity." One who does this should be prepared to deal with the comments that he'll get. Fact of life, like it or not.
But if a guy wants to even out his skin tone or cover a flaw or correct a defect or whatever, by using some sort of makeup, so what? Who will even notice?
In the twenties, it was quite common for a man to dab his cheeks with talcum powder after a shave -- so much so that some high-class men's restrooms came equipped with powder dispensers right next to the Boraxo dispenser over the sink. If that doesn't count as makeup, it's pretty darn close.
katiemakeup said:If you are Ewan McGregor, YES! Carrot Top, NO!
Paisley said:I don't think women have to do much, if anything, to prove we're real women. But I don't think it's that way for men.
KILO NOVEMBER said:Can it really be true that you don't understand the double standard, or is it that you don't approve of some of the implications of the double standard and say that you don't understand it as a rhetorical gambit?
Men and women are biologically different, and from my reading of history, have always been socially different, too. Yes, even today.
You may or may not like these facts, but they are facts none the less. A woman may choose to wear slacks or a skirt and in the social context of western society in the early 21st century, it is a choice that no one finds remarkable. In the same social context, men do not wear skirts. Or at least if a man does, it signifies that he falls outside the social norms.
A "real" man does not have to prove he is a "real" man. Standing by one's principles is an example of being "real". Having the courage of your convictions or being true to yourself are other examples.
I guess for the purposes of this thread wearing make-up if a man chooses to is yet another example of being a "real" man; regardless of how he may be judged by others.
Men and women are biologically different, and from my reading of history, have always been socially different, too. Yes, even today.
Vanessa said:One picture:
MisterCairo said:Are those his wife's pants?????
mattfink said:Not manly, just not part of fashion. I've heard women complaining about other women with fake breasts while they are wearing 10 pounds of make-up. It's all phony.
MisterCairo said:Are those his wife's pants?????
BinkieBaumont said:
Quintin Crisp in the 1930's wore full make up in the streets of London
And when he moved to New York City in the 1990's