Extra! Extra! Heterosexuality in peril!

Dear Readers:

I'm kind of pretty

and pretty damned smart

I like romantic things like music and art

and as you know I have a gigantic heart

so why ... don't I have a boyfriend?

— Kate Monster, "Sucks to be me" from Avenue Q

Sucks to be Kate Monster, and it sucks just as much to be my many friends of similar description — not monsters but smart, pretty, funny, adventurous, and moderately level-headed young women of great heart, who are caught in an endless cycle of dating to no (desirable) purpose and no end in sight, at least out here on the coasts. One friend actually moved to the Midwest to get away from the evil scene and was promptly rewarded with an actual boyfriend, the type who proudly introduces you as his girlfriend and can discuss a future together without smirking. I've developed a kind of semi-vicarious hate-on for the coastal guys — what gives them the right to treat my friends like instantly replaceable consumer objects of dubious value? — so I've been reading with interest some of the recent glut of articles and books on the state of young manhood, First World Problem version.

A D V E R T I S E M E N T


Most of these come down to "men are just big boys/no they aren't," the argument currently raging, or at least smoldering, pretty much anywhere you find people discussing the current social climate and where we seem to be heading, love-and-marriagewise.

On the "no wonder you can't find a boyfriend" side, you find innumerable lifestyle articles, most notably and recently Gary Cross's Men To Boys: The Making of Modern Immaturity, in which the historian blames the immaturity he sees in modern Western males on three decade's worth of cultural shift, starting with a rejection of the old, unquestionably masculine and often admirable but also frequently rigid and authoritarian paternalism of the "Greatest Generation," which left men wandering, lost and fatherless, for lack of a better role-model to replace the castoff, too-dadly Dad. This is nothing startling — we've heard it before — but he does present a decent argument and does so without too much blame, some hope for the future of heterosexuality, and none of the (admittedly rather entertaining) snottiness of our next example, the recent articles by Kay S. Hymowitz in City Journal.

City Journal is the organ of conservative think tank the Manhattan Institute, but so what? It has lively cultural commentary and even if you don't want to be a conservative yourself, it isn't (I think) contagious, so why shouldn't readers of leftish news weeklies read out of their comfort zones occasionally? And its authors, apparently, aren't afraid to say they were wrong, which is always cheering. The first of the two articles, "Child-man in the Promised Land" was another of the "men suck" pieces. The man-child (whom the writer contrasts with the man, who has or wants a wife and kids and actually seeks out responsibilities and then discharges them rather than avoiding ever acquiring any) has tastes both formed and reflected by Maxim and [adult swim]. He likes video games and junk food and sex but not women, really, and he doesn't call when he says he will because he never intended ...

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( 2 comments | Comment on this article )
mtoby on Friday, December 12, 2008 at 08:02 PM
Interesting how often women complain about how awful men are, and yet how rare. It reminds me of the old Woody Allen joke about the two women at the resort: one says, "the food here is terrible," and the other responds, "yes, and such small portions." I mean, if we're so awful, why aren't women glad they DON'T have to settle down with us? Sounds like refusing to commit is a favor men do for women, so that those self-same women aren't saddled with some "man-child." And you're welcome.

Why don't women ask themselves WHY men prefer the company of "video games and junk food" to the company of women who think of men as, well, immature and inferior? Frankly, much of the whining women do about dating nowadays simply sounds like sour grapes. "He preferred video games and junk food to me" sounds like a statement about the woman more than about the man (i.e., she wasn't as enthralling as a game of Doom and a twinkie).

Perhaps if women stopped blaming men for their loneliness, they might find men more willing to put down their hobbies and pay attention to them. Just a thought.
Sgualdrino on Tuesday, December 16, 2008 at 06:43 AM
What makes ANYone think that Kate Monster's lament can't be sung by a man? Or by a woman about another woman?

Nothing about loneliness is essentially gendered. If there is a problem in getting partnered -- Mazal Tov, world! -- it's universal.

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