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Transcending Masculinity
Heather Collette-VanDeraa
ABSTRACT: Notions of masculinity have been
discussed in film scholarship for decades, with
the genre of action films, particularly that
of the boxing film, providing a most fertile
ground for discourse. While Rocky (1976) did
not inaugurate the genre, it remains one of the
seminal films of not only the boxing genre, but
of all American films, providing an archetype
of masculinity that spawned a franchise. Many
of these films repeat a theme of triumph
against all odds that relies on a negotiation and
assertion of masculinity in its most physical
(and often violent) forms. Jurgen Reeder (1995)
asserts that “these films seem to be a kind of
ritual where a seemingly identical dramatic
structure is reiterated many times over…such
ritual repetition of dramatic themes express[es]
an epoch’s need to explore an experience that
as yet has not been adequately formulated and
thematized” (131). The ‘experience’ that has
yet to be adequately formulated in Rocky is a
construction of masculinity that must adapt
to, and reflect, the changing cultural climate of
working- and middle-class values in light of civil
rights and gender equality. In his struggle to
achieve champion status, Rocky Balboa navigates
a new cultural terrain marked by a disruption of
traditional gender roles. While the hard-body/
action genre of films has presented an arguably
homogenous class of masculine iconography,
Rocky can be deconstructed today in light of an
historical re-reading to demonstrate a nuanced
representation of masculinity simultaneously
embodied in the character’s physical strength
and emotional development, both of which are
achieved through his interpersonal relationships.
Rocky Balboa’s masculinity is marked by a
personal catharsis of emotional self-actualization
that transcends his raw physicality and role
as an underdog boxer. As any athlete will tell
you, physical strength is enhanced by a mental
and emotional fortitude, which develops in
Rocky primarily though the titular character’s
interpersonal relationships. Rocky’s development
both physically and emotionally is enhanced
through his relationships with principle love
interest, Adrian (Talia Shire), and boxing rival
Apollo Creed (Carl Weathers) as well as the
other men, most notably the father-figure
trainer, Mickey (Bergess Meredith), and Adrian’s
brother Paulie (Burt Young). In contrast to views
expressed in other studies of the film, Rocky
presents a nuanced, if somewhat sentimental,
archetype of a man who must negotiate his
masculinity through complex emotional
relationships with others, while simultaneously
developing his physical strength. It is these
relationships that frame the central plot of
Rocky’s physical training and ultimate match in
the boxing ring, which, unlike the interpersonal
relationships, ends in ambivalent defeat.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Heather Collette-VanDeraa,
"Transcending Masculinity"
(May 1, 2008).
UCLA Center for the Study of Women.
CSW Update Newsletter.
Paper May08_Collette-VanDeraa.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/csw/newsletter/May08_Collette-VanDeraa
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