Masculine Gender Role Stress

It is proposed that masculine gender role socialization affects whether men appraise specific situations as stressful. Behavioral research on stress and coping has remained relatively blind to the possibility of significant gender role differences in appraising events as stressful. Therefore, a new scale was developed to measure masculine gender role stress (MGRS). Data were presented to substantiate hypotheses that MGRS scores (1) significantly distinguish men from women, (2) are unrelated to global measures of sex-typed masculinity, and (3) are significantly associated with at least two measures of self-reported stress (i.e., anger and anxiety). Stressful situations represented on the MGRS scale include cognitive, behavioral, and environmental events associated with the male gender role. Factor analysis demonstrates that these concerns cluster in five particular domains reflecting physical inadequacy, emotional inexpressiveness, subordination to women, intellectual inferiority, and performance failures involving work and sex. The findings are discussed in terms of cognitive-behavioral concepts of stress and coping.

[1]  R. Lazarus Psychological stress and the coping process , 1970 .

[2]  M. Fasteau The Male Machine. , 1974 .

[3]  Herb Goldberg,et al.  The Hazards of Being Male: Surviving the Myth of Masculine Privilege , 1976 .

[4]  R. Lazarus,et al.  Stress and coping: An anthology , 1977 .

[5]  S. Bem The measurement of psychological androgyny. , 1974, Journal of consulting and clinical psychology.

[6]  Richard S. Lazarus,et al.  Cognitive and Coping Processes in Emotion , 1974 .

[7]  S. Bem Gender schema theory: A cognitive account of sex typing. , 1981 .

[8]  G. Glass,et al.  The Relationship between Sex Roles and Mental Health: A Meta-Analysis of Twenty-Six Studies , 1982 .

[9]  J. A. Doyle The Male Experience , 1983 .

[10]  J. Siegel The Multidimensional Anger Inventory. , 1986, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[11]  B. Whitley Sex role orientation and self-esteem: a critical meta-analytic review. , 1983, Journal of personality and social psychology.

[12]  Nina L. Colwill,et al.  The psychology of sex differences , 1978 .

[13]  R. Helmreich,et al.  Masculinity & femininity: Their psychological dimensions, correlates, and antecedents , 1978 .

[14]  D. Wingard The sex differential in morbidity, mortality, and lifestyle. , 1984, Annual review of public health.

[15]  Joseph H. Pleck,et al.  The myth of masculinity , 1981 .

[16]  Men in transition : theory and therapy , 1982 .

[17]  Lucia A. Gilbert,et al.  Sex role stereotypes: Effect on perceptions of self and others and on personal adjustment. , 1976 .

[18]  S. Folkman,et al.  Stress, appraisal, and coping , 1974 .

[19]  Anne Fausto-Sterling,et al.  Myths of Gender: Biological Theories about Women and Men , 1987 .

[20]  James M. O'Neil,et al.  Gender-Role Conflict and Strain in Men’s Lives , 1982 .

[21]  A. Johnson Recent trends in sex mortality differentials in the United States. , 1977, Journal of human stress.

[22]  I. Waldron,et al.  Why do women liver longer than men? , 1976, Journal of human stress.