ABSTRACT

Between Men and Feminism had its origins in a lively colloquium at St John’s College, Cambridge in 1990. It discusses how two decades of feminism have affected the ways men define their own masculinities, and how they have responded in their own social, sexual and political lives to the challenges posed by the evolving feminist critiques of patriarchy and maleness itself.

The collection contains a great diversity of approaches from Britain and North America. It includes viewpoints from academics, a poet, an educational researcher and the members of an active men’s group. Gay issues feature prominently, as do psychoanalytical views, and a number of the pieces provide a refreshingly personal and practical outlook.

Between Men and Feminism shows men finding their own way within the spaces feminism has opened to them, rediscovering their own gendered voices and participating in the transformation of controllong ideologies in their daily lives. These very readable accounts will appeal not only to students in the social sciences and gender studies, but to all men who find themselves responding to the feminist challenge.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

part I|44 pages

Making space

chapter Chapter 1|22 pages

Of me(n) and feminism

Who(se) is the sex that writes?

chapter Chapter 3|7 pages

Men and women

The use and abuse of mutual space

part II|63 pages

Writing between the lines

chapter Chapter 4|23 pages

Men after feminism

Sexual politics twenty years on

chapter Chapter 5|25 pages

Body odor

Gay male semiotics and l'écriture féminine

chapter Chapter 6|13 pages

What do men want?

part III|63 pages

Between men: finding their own way

chapter Chapter 7|19 pages

Men and change

Reflections from a men's group

chapter Chapter 9|21 pages

The personal, the political, the theoretical

The case of men's sexualities and sexual violences