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 Society—as well as other writings, including The Closing of the American Mind—Sally 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 45.
1. lappuse
... visible as a category embodied in gendered and racialized terms can call into question the privileges of unmarkedness; but visibility can also mean a different kind of empowerment, as the history of movements for social equality in the ...
... visible as a category embodied in gendered and racialized terms can call into question the privileges of unmarkedness; but visibility can also mean a different kind of empowerment, as the history of movements for social equality in the ...
2. lappuse
... visible in political terms, even as they benefit from the invisibility of their own racial and gender specificity. Political power and the rights of citizenship, in this formulation, fall to those who are not “encumbered” by racial and ...
... visible in political terms, even as they benefit from the invisibility of their own racial and gender specificity. Political power and the rights of citizenship, in this formulation, fall to those who are not “encumbered” by racial and ...
3. lappuse
... visible, will necessarily erode their power. This way of thinking makes it nearly impossible to see how whiteness and masculinity have, in fact, quite often been marked and made visible in both progressive and reactionary ways; and how ...
... visible, will necessarily erode their power. This way of thinking makes it nearly impossible to see how whiteness and masculinity have, in fact, quite often been marked and made visible in both progressive and reactionary ways; and how ...
5. lappuse
... visible of white Protestant masculinity as a specific identity category; but he goes further to suggest that what had once been an unquestioned privilege has turned into a liability. No longer able to “take refuge” in the invisibility ...
... visible of white Protestant masculinity as a specific identity category; but he goes further to suggest that what had once been an unquestioned privilege has turned into a liability. No longer able to “take refuge” in the invisibility ...
11. lappuse
... visible primarily as wounded. Of the six essays published in this issue, three take male suffering, male masochism, and/or male hysteria as their subject, and a fourth has at least one reference to Freud's essay on masochism, “A Child ...
... visible primarily as wounded. Of the six essays published in this issue, three take male suffering, male masochism, and/or male hysteria as their subject, and a fourth has at least one reference to Freud's essay on masochism, “A Child ...
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 Conroy’s construction crisis in white critics critique culinity culture wars D’Souza Dead Poets Society dead white male Dickey’s novel discourse disembodied dominant masculinity embodiment emotional energies expression female feminine feminism feminist film’s force Garp Garp’s gender and racial Goldberg heterosexual homosexuality hysterical identity politics impulses individual Irving Irving’s King’s literal literary male power male sexuality man’s marked masochism masochistic mass culture men’s liberation men’s liberationists metaphor Middle American middlebrow Misery novels narrative natural normative pain patriarchal Paul’s penis Peter phallic position post-liberationist Prince of Tides Rabbit at Rest Rabbit Is Rich Rabbit Redux race rape remasculinization representation represents rhetoric Roth Roth’s social story suffering suggests Tarnopol texts therapeutic tion Tom’s trauma Trumper unmarked Updike Updike’s victims violence visible Water-Method white and male white male author white male bodies white masculinity women