What the study found
The article argues for bringing critical femininities into conversation with critical masculinities in Family Science. The authors developed a diagnostic tool to help scholars read critical masculinities scholarship through critical femininities frameworks and to ask whether the feminine is valued, obscured, or underexplored.
Why the authors say this matters
The authors encourage readers to consider the benefits of letting critical femininities inform critical masculinities. They suggest this may improve how scholars engage with work on masculinity by making the feminine more visible in analysis.
What the researchers tested
This is a theoretical article, not an empirical study. The authors, a feminist family scholar and a critical femininities scholar, used theoretical frameworks from critical femininities scholarship to develop a diagnostic tool for reading critical masculinities scholarship.
What worked and what didn't
The abstract states that the framework and diagnostic tool were developed for scholars to use when engaging with critical masculinities scholarship. It does not report empirical testing, measured outcomes, or comparisons, so no results about effectiveness are described.
What to keep in mind
The available abstract does not describe limitations, sample size, or empirical data. The article's claims are framed as a theoretical contribution within Family Science.
Key points
- The article calls for linking critical femininities with critical masculinities in Family Science.
- The authors developed a diagnostic tool for reading critical masculinities scholarship.
- The tool asks whether the feminine is valued, obscured, or underexplored.
- The abstract presents the work as theoretical rather than empirical.
- No empirical testing or measured outcomes are described in the abstract.
Disclosure
- Research title:
- Critical femininities are brought into dialogue with critical masculinities
- Image credit:
- Photo by Markus Winkler on Unsplash
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