Redian新闻
>
A ‘Male Morality’ Course Aims to Educate Men on Gender Equality

A ‘Male Morality’ Course Aims to Educate Men on Gender Equality

社会

A gender studies expert wants men to do better.         

Wu Junhong is a 21-year-old civil engineering student at a Shanghai university and identifies himself as a heterosexual man.

Lately, he has often found himself questioning if men, including himself, can relate to the issues many women face, such as their safety in public spaces. His doubts stem from the largely patriarchal society where violence against women is still a common occurrence, despite there being relevant laws in place.

While looking online for answers to those questions, Wu found a post about a “male morality” course on messaging app WeChat in early October. The class claimed to help promote male participation in gender issues by making them more aware of patriarchal ideas and its potential effects on their partners, children, and themselves.  

He immediately registered.

“After breaking up with my girlfriend and having witnessed the vicious gender-based violence (in the media) earlier this year, I wanted to know how I could do better when faced with a similar scenario,” Wu told Sixth Tone.

The male morality class is the latest offering from Fang Gang, a gender studies expert who also teaches psychology and founded the anti-domestic violence China White Ribbon Volunteer project. He told Sixth Tone that the classes are attempting to educate men not just about gender-related issues, but also shed off traditional notions of masculinity that shy away from showing emotions — mostly considered as “signs of weakness” or “feminine traits.”

The course appears to be a fitting response to the much-criticized schools offering “feminine virtue” classes that reinforce stereotypes and demand women to submit to the patriarchy. Instead, the project will have about 20 free classes starting from January 2023 and cover topics such as toxic masculinity, fatherhood, maternal care, sex and relationships, and awareness of gender-based violence, among others.

Fang said that the essence of the male morality class was to “encourage men to participate in actions toward equality,” referring to the declaration made during the 1995 global women’s rights conference in Beijing.

“In the past 20 years, I’ve founded the White Ribbon, launched ‘The Penis Monologues’ play, and started the ‘Good Father’ workshop,” Fang said. “This time, I’m bringing back the male morality course with one idea in mind: to promote gender equality from a male perspective.”

Topics on gender equality and violence against women have drawn more public attention over the past years in China. But the mainstream and social media landscapes are also rife with discourse against the “feminization of men” and alarms over a “masculinity crisis,” with conservatives trolling women who question men about some of their behavior.

A man learns how to take care babies during one of the male morality classes. From @中国慈善家杂志 on Weibo

This year, the attack on a group of female diners in the northern city of Tangshan — they received prison sentences of up to 24 years — and viral videos of a chained woman have further heightened calls to improve the safety of women. And it was these incidents of abuse in particular that led to Wu questioning the shifts in mindsets associated with toxic masculinity and patriarchy.

“Are these men treating other individuals as human beings? That’s the initial thought that rushed into my mind when I saw the news,” said Wu, referring to the high-profile incidents that shocked the nation. “Then I knew clearly that gender is more than a class issue, and I wanted to do more.”

And that’s where Fang plans to step in — to educate men like Wu and others, though it’s not his first attempt in doing so.

In 2015, he started the first male morality class in Beijing, though only two men signed up then, along with a few volunteers from White Ribbon. Seven years later, he said he wanted to revive the course, partially because he believes that the courses may shorten the path to a more gender-friendly social environment.

This year, the male morality course is expanding to Shanghai, Shenzhen, and Chengdu, where regional organizers with relevant experience in gender-related fields will also teach the course.

“It’s about time,” he said, adding that he plans to expand the course nationwide in the coming decade. “Men must change and shall be changed.”

Two weeks since Fang advertised the course on Weibo earlier this month, several candidates from 17 cities have applied to become regional organizers, he said. Four men have already signed up for the classes.

Celine Sun, a 41-year-old woman from Shanghai, attended Fang’s class in 2015 as a White Ribbon volunteer. She sees it as a chance for people to reevaluate gender stereotypes and learn about evolving gender roles.

“The course will benefit society as a whole as it pushes people to reconsider the male image,” Sun told Sixth Tone. “The male morality courses can help free people from the trap brought about by traditional gender stereotypes.”

A man experiences how to adjust malpresentation during one of the male morality classes. From @中国慈善家杂志 on Weibo

But not everyone is convinced. A student surnamed Li told Sixth Tone that she doubted whether such a project would be able to attract those who could benefit from it.

“Only people who already care about gender equality would pay attention to such projects,” Li said. “I don’t think that’s Fang’s ultimate goal.”

But experts say it’s important to educate men about gender-related topics. Projects like the White Ribbon Volunteer group have received hundreds of calls from abusive men since it opened a hotline in 2010 — the center offers counseling, while also confronting them about the issue at hand.

“To better pursue gender equality, it’s important to educate men to get more involved in every aspect of our daily life,” Feng Yuan, director of Beijing-based women’s rights nonprofit Weiping, told Sixth Tone. “Significant progress will come into being, including a better family, a better relationship, and a better environment for women, once men learn how to behave better.”

Editor: Bibek Bhandari.

(Header image: CSA-Archive and Shijue/VCG)


                                     

微信扫码关注该文公众号作者

戳这里提交新闻线索和高质量文章给我们。
相关阅读
大一统视角理解扩散模型Understanding Diffusion Models: A Unified Perspective星跃计划 | MSR Asia-MSR Redmond 联合科研计划邀你申请!Logitech Z506 Surround Sound Home Theater Speaker System继续恢复How Academic Tracking Exacerbates Rural China’s Education Gapsbāo huā shēng?bō huā shēng?For Women Delivery Drivers, Gig Work Feels Like a Guy’s WorldMore Air Conditioning Workers Died This Summer: Media ReportIn a Rural Chinese County, Progress Is Measured by the Worm同样是PM,Product Manager、Program Manager、Project Manager的薪资哪个更高?每天一句英语名言:work hard in silence, let your success be your noiseWhat Do Counseling and Cosmetology Have in Common?Chinese Court Clarifies NFTs Are ‘Virtual Property’世界上最美丽的动物和最花的男人(多图)陌上花开875 Be Your Mirror, Your Sword, Your Shield, and Your Love网红餐厅就餐遭遇枪击案Zhihu Accused of Using Watermarks in Screenshots to Locate UsersHow Hangzhou Freed West Lake and Upended Chinese TourismChina’s ‘Migratory Bird Haven’ Threatened by Climate ChangeWomen’s Rights Law Suggests Gender Reporting Rules for MediaSocial Media Is Fueling Dangerous Beauty Trends — for Babies​免费讲座|Wiley期刊循证医学文献检索& 范文推荐| Journal of Evidence-Based MedicineOn ‘Water Armies’ and Astroturfed MoralityEvent: Is Higher Education Still the Ladder to Success?Can China Keep Its Special Education Teachers?The Winners of China’s Housing Bust: Burnouts and Beach BumsYoung Chinese Are Overdosing on Cough Meds to Combat StressThe Publisher Who Rekindled China’s Curiosity About the World张铁锅非标准藏语版《一个妈妈的女儿》怎样用传统的方法蒸馒头Despite Long Odds, Rural Chinese Continue to Bet on Education2022傅雷翻译出版奖获奖者揭晓 Le palmarès du Prix Fu Lei 2022 dévoiléOusted Luckin Founder Charts Comeback With New Coffee BusinessEpidural-Induced Births ‘Far Behind’ in China, Says Top ExpertAt Ramsar COP14, China Pledges to Expand and Protect Wetlands
logo
联系我们隐私协议©2024 redian.news
Redian新闻
Redian.news刊载任何文章,不代表同意其说法或描述,仅为提供更多信息,也不构成任何建议。文章信息的合法性及真实性由其作者负责,与Redian.news及其运营公司无关。欢迎投稿,如发现稿件侵权,或作者不愿在本网发表文章,请版权拥有者通知本网处理。