“Manspreading” is a relatively new term. According to Google Trends (below), the concept wasn’t really used before the end of 2014. But the idea it’s describing is not new at all. The notion that men occupy more space than women is one small piece of what Raewyn Connell refers to as the patriarchal dividend–the collection of accumulated advantages men collectively receive in androcentric patriarchal societies (e.g., wages, respect, authority, safety). Our bodies are differently disciplined to the systems of inequality in our societies depending upon our status within social hierarchies. And one seemingly small form of privilege from which many men benefit is the idea that men require (and are allowed) more space.
It’s not uncommon to see advertisements on all manner of public transportation today condemning the practice of occupying “too much” space while other around you “keep to themselves.” PSA’s like these are aimed at a very specific offender: some guy who’s sitting in a seat with his legs spread wide enough in a kind of V-shaped slump such that he is effectively occupying the seats around him as well.
I recently discovered what has got to be one of the most exhaustive treatments of the practice ever produced. It’s not the work of a sociologist; it’s the work of a German feminist photographer, Marianne Wex. In Wex’s treatment of the topic, Let’s Take Back Our Space: Female and Male Body Language as a Result of Patriarchal Structures (1984, translated from the German edition, published in 1979), she examines just shy of 5,000 photographs of men and women exhibiting body language that results from and plays a role in reproducing unequal gender relations.
The collection is organized by an laudable number of features of the various bodily positions. Interestingly, it was published in precisely the same year that Erving Goffman undertook a similar sociological study of what he referred to as “gender display” in his book, Gender Advertisements–though Goffman’s analysis utilized advertisements as the data under consideration.
Like Goffman, Wex examined the various details that made up bodily postures that seem to exude gender, addressing the ways our bodies are disciplined by society. Wex paired images according to the position of feet and legs, whether the body was situated to put weight on one or two legs, hand and arm positions, and much much more. And through this project, Wex also developed an astonishing vocabulary for body positions that she situates as the embodied manifestations of patriarchal social structures. The whole book organizes this incredible collection of (primarily) photographs she took between 1972 and 1977 by theme. On every page, men are depicted above women (as the above image illustrates)–a fact Wex saw as symbolizing the patriarchal structure of the society she sought to catalog so scrupulously. She even went so far as to examine bodily depiction throughout history as depicted in art to address the ways the patterns she discovered can be understood over time.
If you’re interested, you can watch the Youtube video of the entire book.
Tristan Bridges, PhD is a professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara. He is the co-editor of Exploring Masculinities: Identity, Inequality, Inequality, and Change with C.J. Pascoe and studies gender and sexual identity and inequality. You can follow him on Twitter here. Tristan also blogs regularly at Inequality by (Interior) Design.
Comments 39
outer_rl — February 8, 2017
Men biologically need a lower temperature between their legs than women do. That is why they sit with their legs further apart then women.
Ronny Verlet — February 9, 2017
Very good article ! On the longer rum women are winning. Why ?
http://www.slideshare.net/RonnyVerlet/the-languish-of-manhood
and
http://www.slideshare.net/RonnyVerlet/gender-apple-of-contentment-slideshare
or
https://issuu.com/ronnyverlet/docs/gender_apple_of_contentment_
A 1979 German Photo Book Traces Manspreading Back to Ancient Civilizations – Arkadian Times — February 9, 2017
[…] ever published. Translated into English in 1984, the photobook, brought to Slate’s attention by Tristan Bridges at Sociological Images, contains around 5,000 photographs of men and women in a wide range of postures and settings. Many […]
Ches R. Tonian — February 10, 2017
As a wheelchair user I can't help but to roll my eyes when I hear people complain about manspreading on the subway. Well at least they can actually access the subway!!!! Take a look at the map of wheelchair accessible NYC subway stops sometime.... it pales in comparison to the regular map! Instead of being offended that men are sitting with their legs slightly agape, how about thinking about all the people that can't even get from point A to point B using the subway system?
Eric C. Anderson — February 12, 2017
Do these people in their universities seriously have nothing better to do with their time?
Jeremy Wilcox — February 13, 2017
Women telling men how to be men..
Ha! Tell a woman how to sit properly or do... anything and watch them lose their shit.
Women really are insane.
Carl Armstrong Jr. — February 19, 2017
Just an FYI.
The penis has a suspensory ligament. that ties it to the pubic symphysis. The "plumbing" then goes under the pubic symphysis which generally means the penis is smack dab in front of the pelvis, not underneath where the opening in the pelvis is. The testicles are also anchored to the bottom of the pubic symphysis by a ligment which projects them forward of the opening in the pelvis.
What this means--anatomically--is that the penis is projected FORWARD when standing (and is supported by the pelvis for sexual thrusting), but when the legs are rotated up (as in sitting), it is oriented directly between the legs (as well as the testes).
For females, the mass of their external genitalia is anchored within the opening of the pelvis. The clitoral suspensory ligament holds the external aspect of the clitoris to the top, front of the opening with the erectile tissues embedded in the labia majora. This means that, when sitting, as long as a woman isn't swollen like a chimpanzee female in full estrus, the mass of her genitals is oriented downward with little or no restriction on closing her legs.
Or, in other words, unless the guy is anorexic and has no muscle mass in his thighs, he's either got to spread his legs a bit (because no two objects can occupy the same space at the same time) or he has to handle himself in some way to prop the genitals above the thighs. "Tucking them back", while possible--as some transvestites have shown--is not normal and is generally uncomfortable. For women, unless... well, I explained why, it's a different situation anatomically.
Dagmar — February 22, 2017
Marianne Wex wrote an other extremely interesting book: Parthenogenesis! The power of women to create life on her own. Without male contributions!
Some years ago I was lecturing about that stuff! The reactions were "interesting"?
I Spent A Week Naked In Public Without Sucking In My Stomach – Primetweets — February 26, 2019
[…] Naomi Wolf argued in The Beauty Myth that making women obsess over their looks is a way to keep them from thriving and effecting change in the world. And then there’s the metaphor of making ourselves smaller. There’s a reason that guys are the ones who are always taking up two or three train seats and bench spots by spreading their legs, AKA manspreading. […]
Elisa — September 19, 2019
Its very funny how some men here try to justify why they open sooo wide their legs with stupid and non cientifical reasons :D hahaha. Sorry what u explained about temperature and physiological structures has no sense at all
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