Anxious Men is an important contribution to the growing body of scholarship concerned with American masculinity as Baldwin explores how “diverse, contradictory, conflicted and contested” it is during the 1940s and 1950s (235). The legacy of the Depression and the Second World War created a crisis over what constituted a masculine identity, which, as Baldwin investigates, led to conservatism and rebellion. The array of masculine representations explored in the study, from office workers to cowboys, soldiers, queer representations, and minority perspectives, provides evidence of how rich and diverse contradictions were to constructions of the masculine gender during the early Cold War era.

- Georgia Woodroffe, University of Exeter, Journal of American Studies

Anxious Men cogently underscores the inherent contradictions and impossible expectations attached to American masculinity in the twentieth century, and highlights the challenges faced by authors who sought to fashion alternatives to the hegemonic model.

- Maggie McKinley, Harper College, Men and Masculinities

Examining a range of early Cold War US novels, Baldwin’s book represents a timely discussion of the fashioning of male subjectivities and roles through imagined narratives. In an era where disguised insecurities of gender dominate our politics, this will prove a suggestive contribution to a debate in which all our futures are implicated.

- Ben Knights, Teesside University,

Christopher Watkin provides the first comprehensive introduction to Serres' thought from The System of Leibniz (1968) through to his final publications in 2019. Working from the original French, he engages with both translated and major untranslated texts, providing a true overview of Serres' thinking.Using diagrams to explain Serres' thought, the first half of the book carefully explores Serres' 'global intuition' how he understands and engages with the world and his 'figures of thought', the repeated intellectual moves that characterise his unique approach. The second half explores in detail Serres' revolutionary contributions to the areas of language, objects and ecology.Watkin shows that Michel Serres has produced a cross-disciplinary body of work that provides a crucial and as yet under-exploited reference for current debates in post-humanism, object oriented ontology, ecological thought and the environmental humanities.
Les mer
Focusing on a complex and contentious period that was formative in shaping American society and culture in the twentieth century, this book sheds new light on the ways in which fiction engaged with contemporary notions of masculinity.
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Acknowledgments Introduction: anxiety, conformity and masculinity 1. ‘Organisation Man’, domestic ideology and manhood 2. ‘Everything in him had come undone’: violent aggression, courage, and masculine identity 3. Representing sexualities and gender 4. Identity and assimilation in Jewish-American fiction 5. African-American identity and masculinity AfterwordWorks cited and consultedIndex
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Offers readings of a wide selection of postwar American novels from 1945 to the mid-1950s, including canonical works, from the unique perspective of their representation of male identity

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781474494892
Publisert
2022-03-03
Utgiver
Edinburgh University Press
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
272

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Clive Baldwin is Honorary Associate of the Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences, The Open University and formerly Associate Dean for Learning and Teaching in the Faculty of Arts, The Open University. His publications include a review of Maggie McKinley, Masculinity and the Paradox of Violence in American Fiction, 1950-75 in Culture, Society & Masculinities, 8:1, 2016, 'Digressing from the point: Holden Caulfield's women' in Sarah Graham. J.D. Salinger's The Catcher in the Rye (London: Routledge, 2007), and ‘"A certain ill-defined disgrace": masculinity and sexuality in Ian McEwan’s On Chesil Beach', English Review, 2011.