A cultural genealogy of machismo: Mexico and the United States, cowboys and racism

Abstract Men in Mexico have recently been characterized as uniformly macho by different anthropologists and other scholars, including those in the United States. This essay examines such social scientific categorization, and contrasts the uses and meanings of the terms macho and machismo in contempo...

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Main Author: Matthew C. Gutmann
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Sul 2025-07-01
Series:Horizontes Antropológicos
Online Access:http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-71831997000100105&lng=en&tlng=en
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author Matthew C. Gutmann
author_facet Matthew C. Gutmann
author_sort Matthew C. Gutmann
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Men in Mexico have recently been characterized as uniformly macho by different anthropologists and other scholars, including those in the United States. This essay examines such social scientific categorization, and contrasts the uses and meanings of the terms macho and machismo in contemporary Mexico and the United States. What it means to be a macho-whether the macho is considered brutish, gallant, or cowardly-changes over time for various sectors of Mexican society in particular. Often the catchword machismo is employed in mutually exclusive ways today in Mexico, whereas in the United States it is generally assumed, in both popular and academic (official) writings, that machismo is an especially Mexican male characteristic. By capriciously glossing over significant differences among men based on class, generation, region, and ethnicity, among other factors, such generalizations have come to invent and then perpetuate sterile ideal types and racist stereotypes. The notable role of anthropologists of Latin America in the spread of these generalizations is detailed here. This paper draws on extensive and original ethnographic fieldwork in a colonia popular of Mexico City, on ethnohistorical materials concerning the cultural nationalist etymology of the word machismo, and on discussions with college youth in the United States concerning these terms and issues.
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spelling doaj-art-ae7a8a5a423f495fbd5db85b6d2102022025-08-20T02:46:20ZengUniversidade Federal do Rio Grande do SulHorizontes Antropológicos1806-99832025-07-013510513910.1590/s0104-71831997000100006A cultural genealogy of machismo: Mexico and the United States, cowboys and racismMatthew C. GutmannAbstract Men in Mexico have recently been characterized as uniformly macho by different anthropologists and other scholars, including those in the United States. This essay examines such social scientific categorization, and contrasts the uses and meanings of the terms macho and machismo in contemporary Mexico and the United States. What it means to be a macho-whether the macho is considered brutish, gallant, or cowardly-changes over time for various sectors of Mexican society in particular. Often the catchword machismo is employed in mutually exclusive ways today in Mexico, whereas in the United States it is generally assumed, in both popular and academic (official) writings, that machismo is an especially Mexican male characteristic. By capriciously glossing over significant differences among men based on class, generation, region, and ethnicity, among other factors, such generalizations have come to invent and then perpetuate sterile ideal types and racist stereotypes. The notable role of anthropologists of Latin America in the spread of these generalizations is detailed here. This paper draws on extensive and original ethnographic fieldwork in a colonia popular of Mexico City, on ethnohistorical materials concerning the cultural nationalist etymology of the word machismo, and on discussions with college youth in the United States concerning these terms and issues.http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-71831997000100105&lng=en&tlng=en
spellingShingle Matthew C. Gutmann
A cultural genealogy of machismo: Mexico and the United States, cowboys and racism
Horizontes Antropológicos
title A cultural genealogy of machismo: Mexico and the United States, cowboys and racism
title_full A cultural genealogy of machismo: Mexico and the United States, cowboys and racism
title_fullStr A cultural genealogy of machismo: Mexico and the United States, cowboys and racism
title_full_unstemmed A cultural genealogy of machismo: Mexico and the United States, cowboys and racism
title_short A cultural genealogy of machismo: Mexico and the United States, cowboys and racism
title_sort cultural genealogy of machismo mexico and the united states cowboys and racism
url http://www.scielo.br/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0104-71831997000100105&lng=en&tlng=en
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