To remove or reduce masculine qualities, characteristics, or dominance from someone or something.
From de- (opposite/removal) + masculine (from Latin masculus) + -ize (make or become). Constructed following standard English verb formation patterns, primarily used in gender and cultural studies.
The existence of 'demasculinize' alongside 'feminize' shows how modern English lets us name what cultures do to roles—like how video games were demasculinized to appeal to broader audiences, or how crying became less demasculinized in modern society.
This term emerged in late 20th-century discourse within feminist and gender studies frameworks. It reflects assumptions about 'masculinity' as a monolithic, undesirable quality to be removed, potentially conflating biological sex with socially constructed gender traits and reinforcing binary thinking.
Use with specificity: name the actual behavior or trait being addressed (e.g., 'reduce authoritarian structures'). Avoid suggesting that feminine qualities are inherently superior or that gender traits are fixed.
["reform authoritarian practices","shift institutional culture toward equity","challenge hierarchical power dynamics"]
Women's contributions to dismantling hierarchical power structures were often attributed to general 'cultural change' rather than credited to feminist organizing, labor, and scholarship that explicitly theorized these alternatives.
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