Marked Men: White Masculinity in CrisisColumbia University Press, 2000. gada 31. aug. - 288 lappuses White men still hold most of the political and economic cards in the United States; yet stories about wounded and traumatized men dominate popular culture. Why are white men jumping on the victim bandwagon? Examining novels by Philip Roth, John Updike, James Dickey, John Irving, and Pat Conroy and such films as Deliverance, Misery, and Dead Poets Societyas well as other writings, including The Closing of the American MindSally Robinson argues that white men are tempted by the possibilities of pain and the surprisingly pleasurable tensions that come from living in crisis. |
No grāmatas satura
1.5. rezultāts no 82.
3. lappuse
... bodily difference. Identity politics rests on the premise that the minoritized subject is marked by the dominant culture and its representational regimes as lesser, made to embody the difference and particularity against which the norm ...
... bodily difference. Identity politics rests on the premise that the minoritized subject is marked by the dominant culture and its representational regimes as lesser, made to embody the difference and particularity against which the norm ...
6. lappuse
... bodily trauma. That the article studiously avoided uttering the word power suggests that the figure of the wounded white man enables an erasure of the institutional supports of white and male dominance, as we will see in many instances ...
... bodily trauma. That the article studiously avoided uttering the word power suggests that the figure of the wounded white man enables an erasure of the institutional supports of white and male dominance, as we will see in many instances ...
12. lappuse
... bodily economy and helps to explain, at least in part, the centrality of the white male body to explorations of crisis. But the release that men seek, and the resolution that might be found at the end of a crisis, are always deferred ...
... bodily economy and helps to explain, at least in part, the centrality of the white male body to explorations of crisis. But the release that men seek, and the resolution that might be found at the end of a crisis, are always deferred ...
13. lappuse
... bodily figures? The display of wounds and of male suffering is central to elaborations of a crisis in white masculinity, but masochism always competes with the more clearly phallic pleasures of release. The fact that Freud saw masochism ...
... bodily figures? The display of wounds and of male suffering is central to elaborations of a crisis in white masculinity, but masochism always competes with the more clearly phallic pleasures of release. The fact that Freud saw masochism ...
17. lappuse
... bodily discourse functions to muddy the oppositions that these cultural critics are invested in upholding, including the opposition between the abstract and the material, the individualist and the collectivist, the universal and the ...
... bodily discourse functions to muddy the oppositions that these cultural critics are invested in upholding, including the opposition between the abstract and the material, the individualist and the collectivist, the universal and the ...
Saturs
1 | |
23 | |
Scenes from the Culture Wars | 52 |
White Male Authorship in Crisis | 87 |
Mens Liberation and the Wounds of Patriarchal Power | 128 |
Marked Men and the Wounds of Dammed Masculinity | 153 |
Notes | 193 |
Bibliography | 243 |
Index | 261 |
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American culture Annie anxiety argues becomes blockage and release blocked Bloom bodily claims Conroys construction crisis in white critics critique culinity culture wars DSouza Dead Poets Society dead white male Dickeys novel discourse disembodied dominant masculinity embodiment emotional energies expression female feminine feminism feminist films force Garp Garps gender and racial Goldberg heterosexual homosexuality hysterical identity politics impulses individual Irving Irvings Kings literal literary male power male sexuality mans marked masochism masochistic mass culture mens liberation mens liberationists metaphor Middle American middlebrow Misery novels narrative natural normative pain patriarchal Pauls penis Peter phallic position post-liberationist Prince of Tides Rabbit at Rest Rabbit Is Rich Rabbit Redux race rape remasculinization representation represents rhetoric Roth Roths social story suffering suggests Tarnopol texts therapeutic tion Toms trauma Trumper unmarked Updike Updikes victims violence visible Water-Method white and male white male author white male bodies white masculinity women