MissQueenie
Practically Family
- Messages
- 502
- Location
- Los Angeles, CA
I think there is a gross misunderstanding of the term "Metrosexual" as it is commonly used. In itself, the term has absolutely nothing to do with being effeminate. Metrosexual is a label that is used to describe behaviors associated with modern positive stereotypes about homosexual men (such as careful attention to one's appearance and grooming, sometimes to the point of "beauty treatments" like waxing, coloring one's hair, etc, wearing fashionable and/or expensive clothing, entertaining, etc) that have been adopted by heterosexual men, often living in urban areas (Los Angeles, New York, etc).
I'd like to point out that these qualities, now considered effeminate, were extremely mainstream in the Golden Era. Fred Astaire's Toupee -- a vanity, surely, but it was impeccable and classy and you'd never know unless someone told you. Is this different than a modern man dyeing his hair to cover premature grays? How many "manly" men of today do you know (outside the vintage set -- or within it, for that matter) who carry (and use!) a pocket comb? A pocket comb was essential to ensuring the modern man of the GE was perfectly groomed at all times -- and it was never considered unmanly. My own grandfather -- a war hero, engineer, and hobbyist-carpenter and mechanic -- kept a manicure case in his bathroom drawer and used it often, right up to the day he passed away. No one in their right mind would ever have called him effeminate. And look at all of the revered male style icons discussed at length right here on the lounge -- do you think those men weren't paying very careful attention to their fashion choices? Would you call Bogart, Grant -- yourselves?-- unmanly for putting effort into your appearance? I doubt it.
I think we, as modern men and women, are increasingly conflicted and hung up about these distinctions. The vintage man was, inherently, "metrosexual"; these behaviors have fallen out of cultural fashion in the last 6 decades, and now that they're back among a certain sector of the population, if feels strange, maybe even "unnatural" because we're not used to it anymore. Same jar, new label.
I'd like to point out that these qualities, now considered effeminate, were extremely mainstream in the Golden Era. Fred Astaire's Toupee -- a vanity, surely, but it was impeccable and classy and you'd never know unless someone told you. Is this different than a modern man dyeing his hair to cover premature grays? How many "manly" men of today do you know (outside the vintage set -- or within it, for that matter) who carry (and use!) a pocket comb? A pocket comb was essential to ensuring the modern man of the GE was perfectly groomed at all times -- and it was never considered unmanly. My own grandfather -- a war hero, engineer, and hobbyist-carpenter and mechanic -- kept a manicure case in his bathroom drawer and used it often, right up to the day he passed away. No one in their right mind would ever have called him effeminate. And look at all of the revered male style icons discussed at length right here on the lounge -- do you think those men weren't paying very careful attention to their fashion choices? Would you call Bogart, Grant -- yourselves?-- unmanly for putting effort into your appearance? I doubt it.
I think we, as modern men and women, are increasingly conflicted and hung up about these distinctions. The vintage man was, inherently, "metrosexual"; these behaviors have fallen out of cultural fashion in the last 6 decades, and now that they're back among a certain sector of the population, if feels strange, maybe even "unnatural" because we're not used to it anymore. Same jar, new label.