Taking It Like a Man: White Masculinity Masochism and Contemporary American Culture

Taking It Like a Man: White Masculinity Masochism and Contemporary American Culture

No ratings yet
Feb 1, 2001 · English · Paperback (380 pages)
Add To Shelf

Rate this book


Export Book Journal

Book Details

Format Paperback
Pages 380
Language English
Published Feb 1, 2001
Publisher Princeton University Press
ISBN-10 1400806992
ISBN-13 9781400806997

Description

From the Beat poets' incarnation of the "white Negro" through Iron John and the Men's Movement to the paranoid masculinity of Timothy McVeigh, white men in this country have increasingly imagined themselves as victims. In Taking It Like a Man, David Savran explores the social and sexual tensions that have helped to produce this phenomenon. Beginning with the 1940s, when many white, middle-class men moved into a rule-bound, corporate culture, Savran sifts through literary, cinematic, and journalistic examples that construct the white man as victimized, feminized, internally divided, and self-destructive. Savran considers how this widely perceived loss of male power has played itself out on both psychoanalytical and political levels as he draws upon various concepts of masochism--the most counterintuitive of the so-called perversions and the one most insistently associated with femininity.Savran begins with the writings and self-mythologization of Beat writers William Burroughs, Allen Ginsberg, and Jack Kerouac. Although their independent, law-defying lifestyles seemed distinctively and ruggedly masculine, their literary art and personal relations with other men in fact allowed them to take up social and psychic positions associated with women and racial minorities

Genres

Art & Photography
Add To Shelf

Rate this book


Export Book Journal