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Warning! This is longer than usual, there was too much to talk about and even then the episode had to end in a hurry!
In this episode Mike Abrams, Dezz van Niekerk and Grant Stewart have a wide ranging conversation on masculinity and its forms of expression. How do we make sense or to some extent grasp the high level of gender-based violence in South Africa - without making excuses or justifying? And how do we transform the patterns we see?
Various aspects of masculinity are explored touching on the significant influence of systemic/structural realities, both as a current experience but also within its historical contex and the way that shame and shaming have been used to control especially working class men. Individual issues, informed/influenced by culture, are discussed including the denial of emotions or feelings and the excuses that men often use to avoid these intimate moments of their lives - both within themselves as well as in their interaction with partners and children.
The solutions are not simple or short-term but there is an emphasis on the responsibility of men to do the hard work in their everyday to undo the pattern of GBV in our country; for men to hold men accountable; for men to aim to build ally-ship with women; and to significantly shift the institutions that embody and promote forms of masculinity that produce violence.
Warning! This is longer than usual, there was too much to talk about and even then the episode had to end in a hurry!
In this episode Mike Abrams, Dezz van Niekerk and Grant Stewart have a wide ranging conversation on masculinity and its forms of expression. How do we make sense or to some extent grasp the high level of gender-based violence in South Africa - without making excuses or justifying? And how do we transform the patterns we see?
Various aspects of masculinity are explored touching on the significant influence of systemic/structural realities, both as a current experience but also within its historical contex and the way that shame and shaming have been used to control especially working class men. Individual issues, informed/influenced by culture, are discussed including the denial of emotions or feelings and the excuses that men often use to avoid these intimate moments of their lives - both within themselves as well as in their interaction with partners and children.
The solutions are not simple or short-term but there is an emphasis on the responsibility of men to do the hard work in their everyday to undo the pattern of GBV in our country; for men to hold men accountable; for men to aim to build ally-ship with women; and to significantly shift the institutions that embody and promote forms of masculinity that produce violence.