MasculinitiesHere is a powerful reply to Iron John, a fresh look at the complicated nature of what R.W. Connell calls "masculinities." One of the most important voices in the new feminist scholarship by men, Connell provides a nuanced and incisive analysis of how our notions of masculinity have evolved in psychoanalysis, social science, and historically in the creation of a global economy. There is not one but many masculinities, he claims, in a bold critique of the "men's movement" and other simplistic approaches to sexual identity. Instead, Connell delineates the complicated dynamics of masculine politics and recent changes in male identity. Drawing on rich ethnographic work, Connell offers portraits of dozens of men of different classes, some working to change masculinities, some resisting change. Eel openly disparages his wife: "The first chance I can see to get rid of her, she's gone." Mark, who calls himself "a very straight gay," thinks men should behave in traditionally masculine ways. "If you're a guy why don't you just act like a guy?" he asks. Danny, undertaking the "long haul" of his own sexism, admits, "It's hard not to be aggressive sometimes." Connell offers the first critical history of ideas and the most sophisticated theoretical analysis of masculinity to date. His attempts to understand changes in male identity and to think about these issues on a global scale are unique. Integrating social science, feminist theory, gay theory, and psychoanalysis in an innovative yet unusually accessible way, he develops a new theory of masculinity politics. This is a book for everyone interested in the history of western masculinities and the sexual politics of the contemporary era. |
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Contents
The Science of Masculinity | 3 |
The New Social Science | 27 |
Political Knowledge | 39 |
Mens Bodies | 45 |
The Social Organization of Masculinity | 67 |
Introduction | 89 |
A Whole New World | 120 |
A Very Straight Gay | 143 |
The History of Masculinity | 185 |
Masculinity Politics | 204 |
Practice and Utopia | 225 |
Notes | 244 |
56 | 247 |
259 | |
280 | |
Men of Reason | 164 |
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Common terms and phrases
Adam Singer Alan Alan Rubin androgyny Australian Barry Ryan Bill Lindeman bodily body boys Charles Lawrence Connell construction contradiction counter-culture crisis tendencies critique culinity culture Danny Taylor defined developed discussed in Chapter dominance economic emotional emphasized environmental environmental movement experience father femininity feminism feminist football form of masculinity Freud gay community Gay Liberation gender order gender politics gender relations gentry girls hegemonic masculinity heterosexual homophobia homosexual idea identity ideology instance institutions interviews involved issues Jack Harley knowledge labour life-history linity lives mascu masculinity politics masculinity therapy Men's Liberation men's movement ment milieu mother Nigel Roberts Oedipal organized patriarchy pattern Paul Paul Gray peer group practice psychoanalysis radical rationality reform relationships sense sex role sexual social justice sport story straight strategy symbolic theme things tion transsexual United violence women working-class workplace