Questions

  1. Gretel Ehrlich opens with a reference to the Marlboro Man (pp. 566–7), a lone and rugged-looking cowboy who represented Marlboro in its cigarette advertising for many years. With this reference and her description of the Wyoming landscape, what effect does she achieve in the first three sentences of her essay?

    Question

    uZxg83qH9uNZ3NUqyV8wT7hdxc9/5MQeJeZaOsQNhvI0w6Xk3EOeDQ1B873FE1s7
    Chapter 8 - 3. About Men - Questions: Gretel Ehrlich opens with a reference to the Marlboro Man (pp. 566–7), a lone and rugged-looking cowboy who represented Marlboro in its cigarette advertising for many years. With this reference and her description of the Wyoming landscape, what effect does she achieve in the first three sentences of her essay?
  2. In the first paragraph, Ehrlich claims that by romanticizing the cowboy, we have “disesteemed his true character” (para. 1). How does she define that “true character”?

    Question

    uZxg83qH9uNZ3NUqyV8wT7hdxc9/5MQeJeZaOsQNhvI0w6Xk3EOeDQ1B873FE1s7
    Chapter 8 - 3. About Men - Questions: In the first paragraph, Ehrlich claims that by romanticizing the cowboy, we have “disesteemed his true character” (para. 1). How does she define that “true character”?
  3. What does Ehrlich mean when she calls the cowboy “an odd mixture of physical vigor and maternalism” (para. 2)?

    Question

    uZxg83qH9uNZ3NUqyV8wT7hdxc9/5MQeJeZaOsQNhvI0w6Xk3EOeDQ1B873FE1s7
    Chapter 8 - 3. About Men - Questions: What does Ehrlich mean when she calls the cowboy “an odd mixture of physical vigor and maternalism” (para. 2)?
  4. In paragraphs 5 and 6, Ehrlich analyzes the cowboy’s relationship with women. How has the cowboy’s history defined the way he interacts with women?

    Question

    uZxg83qH9uNZ3NUqyV8wT7hdxc9/5MQeJeZaOsQNhvI0w6Xk3EOeDQ1B873FE1s7
    Chapter 8 - 3. About Men - Questions: In paragraphs 5 and 6, Ehrlich analyzes the cowboy’s relationship with women. How has the cowboy’s history defined the way he interacts with women?
  5. How does the paradoxical statement by Ted Hoagland that “[n]o one is as fragile as a woman but no one is as fragile as a man” (para. 8) distill the points Ehrlich makes throughout the essay?

    Question

    uZxg83qH9uNZ3NUqyV8wT7hdxc9/5MQeJeZaOsQNhvI0w6Xk3EOeDQ1B873FE1s7
    Chapter 8 - 3. About Men - Questions: How does the paradoxical statement by Ted Hoagland that “[n]o one is as fragile as a woman but no one is as fragile as a man” (para. 8) distill the points Ehrlich makes throughout the essay?