Chapter 12, Reading in the Social Sciences 57
A. was a teacher interested in issues of discipline.
B. is an individual interested in gender issues.
C. has children.
6. The author believes that
A. inborn differences are a fact of life.
B. male and female children are innately the same.
C. environmental factors have no influence on defining gender.
7. According to the author, girls
and boys become strangers
A. before they reach school age.
B. when competing in spelling bees or dodge ball.
C. when they “grow up free.”
8. The author begins the excerpt by asking the reader to “name one famous friendship between a
woman and a man . . .” in order to make the point that
A. women were in the past and are currently the property of men.
B. it is almost impossible to name one.
C. there are many from which to choose.
After reading the selection regarding men in today’s culture, answer the multiple-choice
questions that follow.
The male hero image in our culture is reflected in the men who constitute our fantasy
identification figures. Most of them share certain specific characteristics: emotional mutedness,
an extremely independent style, lack of emotional
vulnerability, and in general, a very narrow
band of outward expressiveness.
A group of eighty college men were asked by researchers to indicate their preferred
heroes. As reported, they invariably preferred stories
of males who were solitary, strong,
independent, and in the process of actively striving to overcome obstacles. The heroes rarely
gave signs of seeking out close relationships with people, although they did occasionally bestow
on them a kind of impersonal attention, one which further served
to demonstrate their own
greater adequacy.
Today, despite often-heard verbalizations to the contrary, and an emphasis on feelings,
there is still great discomfort and embarrassment when a man overtly and spontaneously
expresses his emotions,
breaks down in tears, rages in open anger or hate, trembles and shakes in
fear, or even laughs too boisterously. Occasionally, when male political leaders show
58 Chapter 13, Reading in the
Life and Natural Sciences
spontaneous emotion their images become tarnished and they lose points, as when Senator
Muskie openly lost his temper during the 1972 campaign, vice-presidential candidate Tom
Eagleton was revealed to
have experienced depressions, President Johnson pulled on the ears of
his dog or showed the world his post-operative scar, or Kissinger lost his cool at a press
conference.
Clearly, the male is still in a cultural climate that has little authentic tolerance for his
emotional expressiveness.
[Goldberg, Herb.
The Hazards of Being Male: Surviving the Myth of Masculine Privilege
. New
York: Signet, 1976, pp. 42-43.]
9. Of the following which is not a characteristic of the male hero?
A.
emotional vulnerability
B. independence
C. few outward expressions
10. Paragraph two uses which pattern of organization to support the main idea?
A. cause-effect
B. contrast
C. example
BONUS QUESTIONS
11. It can be inferred from the passage that U.S. society
A. needs more female leaders.
B. is extremely tolerant of emotionally vulnerable males.
C. does not respect male leaders who show emotion.
12. It is implied that President Johnson was
A. an animal activist.
B. cruel.
C. insane.
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