Word: chou
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Because of the easily accessible nature of her thesis topic, Chou says that “everyone had opinions and advice.” Even after handing in her Maxim opus, she still enjoys perusing the stacks of friends’ Maxims she has piled up on her bedroom floor. Upon spotting an article detailing the intricacies of dumping a dead body, she says, “You never know what they’re going to come up with next...
...jumble of sophomoric humor and wet dreams waiting to happen that is Maxim magazine, Vicki Chou ’02 sees something more. Sitting in her creatively disordered Quincy bedroom surrounded by more than 50 issues of the men’s magazine, Chou still becomes visibly giddy when discussing her 103-page social studies thesis about the millennial cultural touchstone...
...Maxim is louder, noisier and more in-your-face than previous men’s magazines,” she says. “It presents a uniquely American view of masculinity.” In her thesis, Chou argues that Maxim is “a reaction to a masculinity crisis in the second half of the 20th century...
...argues, has filled the void: He is the definition of ’90s masculinity. He likes “Sex Sports Beer Gadgets Clothes Fitness”—the words boldly emblazoned, white on black, across the cover of every single issue of Maxim (though Chou notes that the French version gives higher billing to clothes and omits beer altogether...
...Chou argues that straight white men, forced into the cultural shadows by the late 20th-century obsession with diversity, are finally able to reassert their identities by reading Maxim and watching programs like Comedy Central’s “The Man Show.” “They can overthrow political correctness and politeness and be proud of being a man again,” she says. But some Maxim readers disagree, arguing that there is nothing new going on here. “Man has always been about looking at hot chicks and power tools...