Power, class, masculinity
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FB et le #vert - #masculin #viril #hairy et quoi d'autre ?
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DmC: Devil May Cry- Mission 5: Virility
Yeah, totally normal-looking building. Cool.
Kat butt.
Kat is literally so gorgeous.
Well, this certainly doesn't look ominous.
'Lamia' lmao. Isn't that also used as a variant name for vampires or snake-folk?
Yeah, I'd fucking run away, too.
Chill Dante geez. Alsoooo... why does the Rebellion look the same size in his hand there as it does when he's an adult? Does it magically adjust sizes to the wielder? Be pretty useful.
Dante gets all the bitches I guess.
What a gremlin lmao
Ew ew ew gross stop wtf
there's edgy and emo and then there's this
Help meee the way he's looking at her is kind of so sweet????
yeah totally nothing going to be sussy about this mystery 'secret ingredient' with the weird worm mascot
Is this not, like... a secure area? No one's noticing them going inside? No security guards? Despite Mundus having the rest of the city heavily monitored?
this place is a lot bigger than I expected.
THERE ARE BIRDS HERE???
Okay they... look really good together. I have a feeling she's going to die at some point in the story, though. I really hope I'm wrong because I like her.
ass
...Haha... I'm in danger.
that Virility worm for the logo just reminds me of Toji Fushiguro's Hidden Inventory worm.
and... 'obesity'... hahaha. Yes. First world problems.
Are they talking about kids from my graduating class or modern issues together, lmao
Yeah, Soda is poison, guys. too much caffeine and sugar. Drink your water. Hydrate or die-drate.
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Published April 15 2024
"The study suggests the possibility of delayed adverse effects that require more time to manifest at the population level. Understanding the lasting impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic requires ongoing, long-term monitoring of health and deaths among children and youth, particularly in low- and lower-middle-income countries."
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He is, I gather, a man of very virile and positive, one might almost say combative, character.
I was curious about the history of the concept of male virility and found this New Yorker article, which is well worth a read.
"As the anthology’s editors see it, Europe reached peak virility in the nineteenth century. By then, the ideal of the virile man had become almost impossibly confusing. Men who could afford to spent as much time as possible in barracks-like spaces—“college, boarding school, seminary, the singing club cellar, the brothel, the guardroom, gun room, smoking room, various workshops, and cabarets and waiting rooms”—in an effort to maximize virility. At the same time, however, virility was felt as “a network of anxiety-producing injunctions, often contradictory, to which one must, in one way or another, give in.” In an essay on “the code of virility,” Alain Corbin provides a dispiritingly long list of the types of un-virile men:
"He who hesitates to get into the assault on the day of the battle; he who chooses to get a replacement because he has drawn a bad number in the draft lottery; he who was unable to save his comrade from life-threatening danger; he who does not have what it takes to be a hero; he who shows no ambition; he who remains indifferent to excelling or to the prestige of a medal of honor; he who ignores emulation because he does not seek superiority; he who has trouble keeping his emotions under control; he whose speech and writing style lack confidence; he who refuses women’s advances; he who performs coitus without ardor; he who refuses group debauchery—all these men lack virility even though their masculinity would not be challenged."
This Kafkaesque proliferation of crimes against virility is one reason why men stopped talking about it. And the authors in “A History of Virility” are not shy, either, about blaming the cult of virility for the disastrous conflicts of the twentieth century. Virility, the editors write, has long been “linked to death”; a prime way to prove one’s virility is through “heroic death on the battlefield.” After the First and Second World Wars, however, virility seemed not just undesirable but implausible. Death and shell shock among soldiers “undermine[d] the military-virile myth,” they write, and “place[d] masculine vulnerability at the heart of a caring culture.” At the same time, urban life styles and, above all, insurgent female power punctured the mythos of virilitas. In particular, advances in equality between the sexes intruded upon the male-only “scenes of collective virility” that had nurtured it. The sexist, élitist, and militaristic qualities of virility became increasingly unwelcome. By the mid-twentieth century, most people spoke about “masculinity” instead of “virility”—a sign, Corbin, Courtine, and Vigarello write, that something had “changed in the empire of the male.”
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Moribus antiquis res stat Romana virisque.
- Ennius
The Roman state survives by its ancient customs and its manhood.
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I once imagined Boom Eggy as a manly lumberjack..so I had to draw it TwT
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Emperor’s Vigor Tonic: A Game-Changer in Male Wellness
Emperor’s Vigor Tonic: A Game-Changer in Male Wellness
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Moolaadé, 2003
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“What better than the runes, to show us the relationship between the heroic and the sacred, between action and the knowledge in self-sacrifice? What better than the runes to show us the active ingredient in creation and the meaning of spiritual virility?”
- Gabriele Adinolfi.
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It really works! Ask me about it.
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Tucker Carlson is worried about your nuts!
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For the Ancient Greeks, to be a man was not to display one's sexual prowess, nor was it to enact brute force or to be aggressive in any way. It was instead a question of behavior of the noblest and highest kinds. Above all, to be virile was to be self-possessed and to take care of oneself, the better to support others. It was something, in fact, women too could be occasionally -- for example Antigone when she courageously buries her brother against the wishes of the state.
Nina Power, “What Do Man Want?” (2022).
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