
Engendering Men
The Question of Male Feminist Criticism
Routledge (Publisher)
1st Edition
Published on 21. March 2014
Book
Paperback/Softback
332 pages
978-0-415-75228-2 (ISBN)
Description
Over the past several years, the question of men's relation to feminism has become a fiercely and sometimes bitterly debated subject. Engendering Men demonstrates the creative impact that feminist modes of inquiry have already had on a new generation of male critics.
In the wake of feminism, many men have found it imperative to begin the task of retheorizing the male position in our culture. This collection of new essays brings together seventeen male critics whose work - on poetry, fiction, the Broadway stage, film and television, and broader cultural and psychoanalytic texts - is opening up new avenues in criticism, as well as in gender and feminist theory.
In the wake of feminism, many men have found it imperative to begin the task of retheorizing the male position in our culture. This collection of new essays brings together seventeen male critics whose work - on poetry, fiction, the Broadway stage, film and television, and broader cultural and psychoanalytic texts - is opening up new avenues in criticism, as well as in gender and feminist theory.
More details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Taylor & Francis Ltd
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 234 mm
Width: 156 mm
Weight
620 gr
ISBN-13
978-0-415-75228-2 (9780415752282)
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E-Book
08/2012
1st Edition
Routledge
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E-Book
08/2012
1st Edition
Routledge
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Book
06/2012
1st Edition
Routledge
€230.27
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Persons
Joseph A. Boone (University of Southern California, LA, USA), Michael Cadden
Content
Editors' Introduction Part 1: Men, Feminism and Critical Institutions 1. Of Men(n) and Feminism: Who(se) Is the Sex That Writes 2. Engendering F.O.M.: The Private Life of American Renaissance 3. Redeeming the Phallus: Wallace Stevens, Frank Lentricchia, and the Politics of (Hetero)Sexuality 4. "The Lady Was a Litle Pereurse": The Gender of Persuasion in Puttenham's Arte of English Poesie 5. Dicipl(in)ing the Master, Mastering the Discipl(in)e: Erotonomies in James' Tales of Literary Life Part 2: Power, Panic, and Pathos in Male Culture 6. Cowboys, Cadillacs, and Cosmonauts: Families, Film Genres, and Technocultures 7. "Meat Out of the Eater": Panic and Desire in American Puritan Poetry 8. Hester Prynne, C'est Moi: Nathaniel Hawthorne and the Anxieties of Gender 9. The Love-Master Part 3: Cleaning Out the Closet(s) 10. Are We (Not) What We Are Becoming? "Gay" "Identity," "Gay Studies," and the Disciplining of Knowledge 11. Wilde's Hard Labor and the Birth of Gay Reading 12. Homo-Narcissism; or, Heterosexuality 13. Rebel Without a Closet Part 4: Revolutionary Alliances: Call and Response Across Gender 14. Caged Birds: Race and Gender in the Sonnet 15. Homelessness at Home: Placing Emily Dickinson in (Women's) History 16. Celibate Sisters-in-Revolution: Towards Reading Sylvia Townsend 17. (In)Visible Alliances: Conflicting "Chronicles" of Feminism