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Tuesday, October 3, 2023

Bulldog

Sergeant Stubby

Unherd has a story by Mary Harrington about bulldogs and society. This paragraph hit a chord with me:

Responsible owners of working-breed dogs will go to considerable lengths to acommodate their pets’ inclinations. But suggesting that we might occasionally need to extend the same consideration to (at least some) men will get you burned at the stake. So instead of seeking outlets for all those human traits we no longer have a use for, they’ve simply become low-status. In tandem, Pitbull ownership, and also what’s left of the style of masculinity it signals, is increasingly associated with the (often criminal) subcultures for whom such breeds are still useful as fighting or protection dogs, and where aggression, loyalty and so on remain socially valued. So, too, they also became symbols for what’s left of this style of masculinity. If they have subsequently become fashionable again, this is via the flashy aesthetic and live-for-the-moment worldview (and sometimes also active participation in the criminality itself) that percolates out of the aggressively macho produced in these subcultures.

Bonus word of the day: Priapism - a prolonged erection of the penis. Just in case you were wondering, like me.


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