Popular Culture Review Vol. 19, No. 1, Winter 2008 | Page 93

B i g L o v e : Rewriting the Modern Man 89 ideal was created. The internet, e-mail, and cell phones allow danger to enter the American home through the backdoor, undetected. Not only can the male no longer protect the weak from danger, he is often unaware of its entry into his home. Bill’s inability to protect his family is symptomatic of the danger that penetrates into a supposedly safe space and also of a coming to terms with the lack in masculinity when compared to what is stereotypically considered ideal. If, as established in the introduction, Bill can serve as a test case for the modern man despite the exaggerated level of threat to his ideal masculinity, it becomes possible to see the failure, not of Bill’s masculinity, but of the masculine ideal. The contrast between the placid exterior image of masculinity and the interior turmoil reveals that what has been considered ideal is actually an inherently false reflection of the past that does not take into consideration the equalizing pressures that are de-sexing gender roles. The symbolic castration represented through the threats to Bill’s masculinity is actually a liberation from the stereotype, because the distribution of masculinity between the two sexes allows for a lessening of the responsibilities faced by the man. Through the male-driven, hegemonic system of polygamy, the creators of Big Love reveal that just as this paragon of masculinity has kowtowed to the egalitarianism of modem day gender roles, the “average man” can no longer expect to attain the sexually dominant, financially stable, all-controlling, defender role associated with the masculine ideal. Bill, like the ideal, is dynamic and constantly changing; so while he seems utterly different from the average male, with his three wives and his seven children, he is actually the epitome of the modem man with his masculinity in constant flux, if tenuously still intact. University of Pittsburgh Jennifer Lawrence Works Cited “A Barbecue for Betty.” Big Love. HBO. 2006. Bourdieu, Pierre. Masculine Domination. Trans. Richard Nice. Stanford: Stanford UP, 2001. Diekman, Amanda and Alice Eagly. “Stereotypes as Dynamic Constructs: Women and Men of the Past, Present, and Future.” Personality and Social Psychology' Bulletin 26.10, 1999: 1171-88. “Global Better Sex Survey.” 19 June 2007. Khan, Kim. MSN Money. “How does your debt compare?.” 14 Dec. 2006. . “Pilot.” Big Love. HBO. 2006. Sexual Medicine Society' o f North America. 14 Dec. 2006. .