The Different Types of Manliness

by Brett & Kate McKay on September 13, 2009 · 64 comments

in A Man's Life

lawmanSource: Image from freeparking

If you take the time to read the comments on our site, you’ll soon see that there isn’t always agreement on what constitutes being manly. Some say that dressing to the nines is a manly pursuit; others say that caring about your style is distinctly unmanly: “Real men don’t use umbrellas! They just get wet!” Some say guns are manly and that real men know how to protect their loved ones with force; others say that violence is never manly. An article that one segment of readers loves is derided by another as either offensively barbaric or unbearably foo foo and thus unbefitting of a site about manliness.

Such a reaction is natural, as we all have different views of what manliness means and looks like. When we think about manliness, we probably have various types, drawn from our lives and from popular culture-books, movies, television-that pop into our head. Let’s explore what these types are. Below are 6 different types that we often imagine when we think about manliness. Each includes a short description of the type, along with the positive characteristics associated with the type, the possible pitfalls this type of man runs into, and examples, both fictional and real, of this kind of type in the flesh. Keep in mind that the “possible pitfalls” are faults common to this type, but are in no way inevitabilities.

The Warrior

patton

The warrior is arguably the type we’ve been associating with manliness the longest. In ancient times, he was the tribesmen who protected the village from attack; in modern times, he is the soldier who defends freedom. He is the grunt willing to subvert some of his individualism for greater goals and the general who leads his troops into battle. He is the man willing to lay down his life for others and for the glory of conquest and victory.

Positives: Toughness, leadership, courage, sacrifice

Pitfalls: Callousness, difficulty in adjusting to civilian life and relating to non-soldiers, unwilling to question authority

Examples: Audie L. Murphy, George S. Patton, Achilles, Michael Monsoor, Genghis Khan

The Lone Wolf

long

In popular culture, depicting the lone wolf type of manliness is quite popular. He is the cowboy riding his horse alone into the sunset, the biker roaring across the desert, the hobo wandering from place to place. He is also the artistic genius or the intellectual who isolates himself to create a great masterpiece or concentrate on his studies. Taciturn and mysterious, he doesn’t care for cultural rules and conventions; he is the rebel who blazes his own path.

Positives: Self-sufficient, free-thinking, independent, able to be his own man

Pitfalls: Can’t ask for help, difficulty in forming connections with others, depression, suppression of emotions

Examples: Clint Eastwood in pretty much every Clint Eastwood movie, John Wayne, JD Salinger, Louis L’Amour, Jeremiah Johnson

The Adventurer

edmund

This is the man with an overpowering desire to wander, travel, explore, and conquer. He wants to see the places no one or few others have seen. He sees a mountain and wants to climb it simply because it is there. He wants to discover all the world has to offer. He desires to test his limits and get outside his comfort zone. The new, the dangerous, make him feel alive.

Positives: Free spirit, courage, vitality, risk-taking

Pitfalls: Flighty, inability to commit

Examples: Lewis and Clark, Edmund Hillary, Sir Richard Francis Burton, Indiana Jones

The Gentleman

cary_grant

The gentleman is suave, urbane, polite and respectful to all, both to inferiors and superiors. Dapper in dress, proficient in the conversational arts, confident and witty, he easily wins friends and woos the ladies. He is skilled in and knowledgeable about arts, culture, and current events.

Positives: Well-dressed, well-mannered, sprezzatura

Pitfalls: Superficial, neglect of the inner life in favor of outward forms, lack of toughness

Examples: Cary Grant, George Washington, Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Stewart

The Statesman

Demosthenes_Altemps_Inv8581

To the ancient Greeks, a man could not possess manliness without being engaged in civic affairs. The statesman puts the good of the nation above individual pursuits. In his true form, the statesman has 4 attributes, as delineated by Professor J. Rufus Fears: a bedrock of principles, a moral compass, a vision, and an ability to build consensus to achieve that vision. These qualities, along with a proficiency in the art of oratory, allow him to hold together and guide a nation’s or people’s destiny.

Positives: Idealistic, driven, civic-minded, principled

Possible pitfalls: ego-centric, pride leading to scandal and corruption

Examples: Pericles, Demosthenes, Abraham Lincoln, Winston Churchill

The Family Man

aa

While he isn’t the subject of many books and movies like the adventurer or warrior, we still really admire the simple family man, the average Joe who works hard and does the right thing every day. He has “blue collar” values, loves his wife, rarely complains about his job, is a great dad, and is just a solid man all around. He’s the grandfather who exuded manliness and the father you were always a little in awe of.

Positives: Hard working, loyal, good husband and father

Possible pitfalls: Aversion to risk, complacency

Examples: Joe the Little League Coach, your cousin Lou

If there are different types of manliness-es, does that mean we cannot say that there is anything essential to manliness?

Absolutely not. The fundamental principles of manliness-courage, loyalty, integrity, resiliency, personal responsibility, and sacrifice-cut across all types.

Thus we should have a healthy respect for the different types of manliness-es that exist. As long as the fundamental principles are in place, one should not say that one is necessarily better than the others.

And of course, we don’t actually live as types, we live as complex men. Even the men mentioned above as “examples” of each type were not one-sided in their character and pursuits. While one of the types likely describes you more than others, you’re probably a mix of many of them. They should not be seen as incompatible with one another.

The types are really symbols, certain traits and ways of living like a man writ large and exaggerated. Each has important lessons to teach us about being men. From the warrior we learn courage; from the lone wolf we come to understand the importance of individuality; the adventurer teaches us to find ways to explore wherever we are in life; the gentleman rounds off our rough edges; the statesman reminds us to be civic-minded, and the family man teaches us about selflessness. It is not possible to combine the types in our lives in equal degrees, but we can use them to form our own manliness. This was the task accomplished by the greatest men in history. Men like Theodore Roosevelt, Robert E. Lee, and Winston Churchill successfully integrated the best traits from all the types while avoiding the pitfalls of each. They were as at home on the battlefield as the ballroom.

But remember: don’t try to be someone you’re not and beware of the pitfalls of the types that you are. There’s a reason that Cary Grant was never in a Western.


{ 10 trackbacks }

caught with my boredom down - wachwurds jimdo page!
September 14, 2009 at 4:38 am
Tweets that mention The Different Types of Manliness | The Art of Manliness -- Topsy.com
September 14, 2009 at 5:54 pm
links for 2009-09-14 « Rumblegumption
September 14, 2009 at 8:42 pm
FANCY SHOPPE: More Freebies from iRobot with Roomba 570, 562, 560 … | Freebies Uncovered
September 15, 2009 at 3:43 pm
FANCY SHOPPE: More Freebies from iRobot with Roomba 570, 562, 560 … | Freebies Uncovered
September 15, 2009 at 3:43 pm
Completely Random » Link roundup – September 15, 2009
September 15, 2009 at 9:53 pm
Art of manliness: different types of men | How to be a man
September 16, 2009 at 11:43 am
Basic Cancer Causes And Symptoms | Anything fitness | Cancer Health Wisdom
September 17, 2009 at 10:03 pm
Bruce Lee's Simple Beginning Workouts | Martial Arts Leisure Knowledge
October 5, 2009 at 6:01 pm
Got problem with me? « Alvin
October 10, 2009 at 7:13 am

{ 54 comments… read them below or add one }

1 Ronn September 21, 2009 at 12:37 am

I understand that these comments sections are to reply our thoughts, but if anyone is somewhat of a history buff and enjoys reading about manly men, there is a book edited by James Robertson Jr. called Stonewall Jackson’s Book of Maxims. It is a diary of sorts that Gen. Jackson kept throughout his life and speaks on several different topics and how to act in different situations, etc. I have read through it several times and it seems that as brilliant a commander as Gen. Jackson was, he was also a very astute observer.

I would highly recommend this book to anyone that would like to enhance individual characteristics, interpersonal attributes, as well as professional advancement.

2 Kaka September 22, 2009 at 4:08 pm

Why is there a photo of Tenzig Norgay on the top of Mt Everest but only Sir Edmund Hillary is mentioned ?

3 Hoot October 9, 2009 at 7:14 am

These far to easily cross over, would you make the argument Churchill was not only a statesman but an adventurer and a warrior?

4 PK October 28, 2009 at 9:08 pm

Interesting article. I guess I’m a cross between the lone wolf and the adventurer. To Ronn’s comment, I would also recommend Marcus Aurelius’s Meditations for some good manly philosophical thought.

Leave a Comment

Previous post: Manvotional: Allan Quatermain on Death

Next post: Backpacking Basics

Mens Blogs - BlogCatalog Blog Directory <