I've been pondering all the ways girls and women are seeing female protagonists they can relate to: strong, capable and accepting their call to adventure, and how often boys and men are treated as set-pieces in those stories.

I get that this is correcting an imbalance. I celebrate stories that are giving women glimmers of their potential.

But if women know the cost of hollow, cardboard-cut-out representation, are they really comfortable with boys and men being treated this way?

Where are the stories of men which complicate simplistic narratives, which dig into extrinsically-imposed expectations, limitations and obligations, and which deeply challenge social/societal masculine stereotypes?

I mean, why are we so comfortable with masculine gender essentialism, after feminine gender essentialism has been so successfully deconstructed?

I believe that for men to flourish as complex humans, we need to stop telling them they're simple.

@sumpnlikefaith

Fascinating discussion. I’m here to learn with two grown sons that are polar opposites and raised the same.

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@LnzyHou I think the biggest part of what I'm getting at is recognising the diversity that simply exists.

Men resonate with very different things, and are motivated by very different things. Yet what finds expression in pop culture typically wedges "masculine" into a rather small pigeonhole.

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