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UKIP and masculinity

This morning, Diane Abbott gave a heavily trailed speech on the crisis of masculinity. Simplifying her argument somewhat, cultural change and the restructuring of the jobs market has thrown young men into a state of anomie. In one direction they’re being flattered as gendered consumers into clothes, gadgets, cars, booze and footy. From another comes the pressure from ‘pornified culture‘ to shag around as much as possible. And there is the ever-present expectation that a man should have a job that can provide for himself and any family that comes along.

The problem of course is this hegemonic ideal is not only out of reach for growing numbers of young men, it is also persistently challenged by different kinds of masculinities. And that’s well before you start talking about the distinct blurring of gendered identities and sexualities. So yes, Diane is right to draw attention to this issue. It’s not so much a harking back to the male breadwinner of old but recognising that for some younger men, gendered anxiety and what it means to be a man can contribute to crime, misogynistic attitudes, violence and a host of other social problems.

But I’m not going to talk about young men. I want to write about older men, and one oft-overlooked facet of UKIP’s rise – that its activist base and support is fuelled mainly by men of a certain age. It’s been noted here and elsewhere UKIP are not only an anti-politics party, but that it is very uncomfortable with the pace of social change. It’s less ‘small c’ conservative and more ‘stop the world, we want to get off’. But because its core support is men in the middle-aged-to-elderly support range, I think its message has an hitherto unremarked gendered dimension. They too are affected by masculine crisis.

When our UKIP male core were much younger, the widespread availability of primary industry and manufacturing jobs played a particular role in the constitution of gendered relations and identities. In North Staffordshire, being a miner or a steel worker required a certain toughness, resilience and strength. As jobs they were unpleasant and occasionally dangerous but were sites where working class masculine identities emerged, where the nature of the work, the all-male workplace camaraderie and the breadwinning wage ticked all the manly boxes.

A miner was strong. A miner provided for his family. But shut the pits or close the foundry, this gendered anchor comes unstuck. The source of (masculine) pride melts into the air. In villages, towns and cities across the land the steady loss of these jobs were not replaced like for like. Hundreds of thousands of ‘traditional’ working class men undertook work in service sector occupations previously coded as ‘women’s jobs’. The ‘nurturing’ nature of service work, the compulsory uniforms, the subjection to micromanagement and the emasculation of trade unionism were a world away from the ‘men’s work’ they knew previously.

Not all of the UKIP core experienced this, of course. But before primary industry and manufacturing went into a tailspin, you knew exactly where you stood. The rich man was in his castle. The poor man at his (factory) gate. Tearing this world away was tantamount to emasculation for a generation of men, and now feeds into a wider alienation from British culture. The vast majority of jobs available to the sons of these men lack obvious markers of masculinity. Office work, retail, call centres, caring – the economic dominance of service industries are simultaneously symptomatic of the feminisation of working life and national decline. And with this has come the butchering of the armed forces, ‘elf and safety culture, political correctness, women doing “men’s jobs” and, horror of horrors, gay marriage.

In many ways UKIP is the perceived antidote to a perceived problem. Set against the colourless effetes of David CaMoron and Ed MiliBLand, Nigel Farage is unquestionably a man’s man. He might be one of those public boy city trader sorts, but you can go for a pint and a fag with him. He will tell it to you straight. Getting shot of Europe makes us masters of our destiny again. Slinging out the diversity consultants and equality advisors will allow right-thinking Englishmen to speak their mind. And banning gay marriage will knock on the head any ‘Adam and Steve’ nonsense. In fact, UKIP’s whole populist platform is sharp cornered and macho. It concedes nothing and demands everything. Lily-livered compromise is out and plain speaking is in. Don’t like it? Offended? Tough. Man up and fight or shut up and bugger off.

It’s all nonsense of course, but as any observer of the last 30 years will note, nonsense has the annoying habit of gaining traction and assuming a life of its own. Again, fundamentally, the root of UKIP’s manliness is the same as UKIP’s populism: insecurity. Until the Labour Party gets to grip with this most basic of yearnings and pursues policies that can properly address it, so-called masculine crisis and anti-political populism will continue to inflict their damage.

This article first appeared at A Very Public Sociologist

Image credit: luislouro / 123RF Stock Photo

2 Comments

  1. John p Reid says:

    Look at ukip supporters like David Starkey ,very macho, as for Abbott her arrogance and sniping and sneering, at posh white boys, or calling for police cuts as revenge for being Maggies boot boys in blue, shows she’s macho herself,

    Getting up on stage 20 years ago with balaclava wearing members of the IRA at a meeting in hackney wasn’t very if feminine, either,

  2. Dan says:

    Drive the radfems from the left.

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