Friday, September 28, 2012

Editorial Essay: Guyland

Can anything be done to help this generation of young men get back on course?





Of the boys and men profiled in his book, Michael Kimmel writes:

In another era, these guys would undoubtedly be poised to take their place in the adult world, taking the first steps toward becoming the nation’s future professionals, entrepreneurs, and business leaders. They would be engaged to be married, thinking about settling down with a family, preparing for futures as civic leaders and Little League dads. Not today.

Today, many of these young men, poised between adolescence and adulthood, are more likely to feel anxious and uncertain. In college, they party hard but are soft on studying. They slip through the academic cracks, another face in a large lecture hall, getting by with little effort and less commitment. After graduation, they drift aimlessly from one dead-end job to another, spend more time online playing video games and gambling than they do on dates (and probably spend more money too), “hook up” occasionally with a “friend with benefits,” go out with their buddies, drink too much, and save too little. After college, they perpetuate that experience and move home or live in group apartments in major cities, with several other guys from their dorm or fraternity. They watch a lot of sports. They have grandiose visions for their futures and not a clue how to get from here to there. When they do try and articulate this amorphous uncertainty, they’re likely to paper over it with a simple “it’s all good.”

[ … ]

Guyland is the world in which young men live. It is both a stage of life, a liminal undefined time span between adolescence and adulthood that can often stretch for a decade or more, and a place, or, rather, a bunch of places where guys gather to be guys with each other, unhassled by the demands of parents, girlfriends, jobs, kids, and the other nuisances of adult life. In this topsy-turvy, Peter-Pan mindset, young men shirk the responsibilities of adulthood and remain fixated on the trappings of boyhood, while the boys they still are struggle heroically to prove that they are real men despite all evidence to the contrary.

If "Guyland" is indeed home to millions of young American men, what can, and should, be done to help them achieve their full potential? What can society do to better help this generation gain a clearer sense of purpose? In a concise editorial, explain how you believe we, as a country, should address the issues of this generation of young men. To support your thesis, cite evidence from Guyland: The Perilous World Where Boys Become Men. 

Requirements:

  • MLA Style, including parenthetical citation
  • 3-page minimum
  • Include a works cited page

The best papers:

  • Have a title that articulates its point of view
  • Stay within the parameters of the subject matter
  • Have a concise thesis which clearly outlines a position
  • Are written in a voice that is casual, yet informed
  • Clearly support their thesis with solid evidence and a logical structure, citing from Guyland: The Perilous World Where Boys Become Men
  • Conclude with a summation of the argument
  • Properly cite evidence using MLA's parenthetical citation method
  • Are in compliance with MLA Style

Sample editorials from around the country:

Due: Thursday, Oct. 4th (Draft 1; Bring 2 copies)  

No comments:

Post a Comment