ABSTRACT

As more and more work is being done in the name of the ever-growing field of study of literary representations of masculinities, it seems timely to not only review its development and main contributions to the larger field of masculinity studies, but also to look at its latest advances and new directions. These are precisely the two main aims of Masculinities and Literary Studies, which seeks to explore the conjunction between these two fields while exploring some of the latest developments and new directions resulting from such intersections.

If much of the existing masculinity scholarship has traditionally been grounded in a specific discipline, this volume also seeks to provide an innovative methodological approach to the subject of literary masculinities by proving the applicability of the latest interdisciplinary masculinity scholarship - namely, sociology, social work, psychology, economics, political science, ecology, etc. - to the literary analysis, thus crossing the traditional boundary between the Social Sciences and the Humanities in new and profound ways.

Presenting the latest advances in masculinity scholarship, this interdisciplinary book will appeal to gender and masculinity scholars from a wide variety of fields, including sociology and social work, psychology, philosophy, political science, and cultural and literary studies.

part I|29 pages

Rethinking Ethnic Masculinities

chapter 1|7 pages

The Negro Goes to War

chapter 2|9 pages

Revisiting Masculinities from Whiteness Studies

Herman Melville’s “Benito Cereno”

chapter 3|11 pages

Staging Intersectionality

Beyond Gender and Race in the American Theater

part II|39 pages

Transnational Masculinities

chapter 4|17 pages

Men Around the World

Global and Transnational Masculinities

chapter 6|10 pages

New Arab Masculinities

A Feminist Approach to Arab American Men in Post-9/11 Literature Written by Women

part III|30 pages

The Ages of Men

chapter 7|10 pages

“Men Who Cry in Their Sleep”

Aging Male Hysteria in Martin Amis’s London Stories

chapter 8|9 pages

Negotiating Childhood and Boyhood Boundaries

Richard Linklater’s Boyhood and Toni Morrison’s Black Boys

chapter 9|9 pages

Fighting the Monsters Inside

Masculinity, Agency, and the Aging Gay Man in Christopher Bram’s Father of Frankenstein

part IV|23 pages

Masculinities and Affect

chapter 11|10 pages

Men of War

Affect, Embodiment, and Western Heroic Masculinity in Dispatches and The Hurt Locker

part V|21 pages

Eco-masculinities

chapter 12|10 pages

The “Wild, Wild World”

Masculinity and the Environment in the American Literary Imagination

chapter 13|9 pages

Green Intersections

Caring Masculinities and the Environmental Crisis

part VI|37 pages

Masculinities and/in Capitalism

chapter 15|13 pages

Capitalism, Slavery, and Mask-ulinities

New Directions

chapter 16|9 pages

“To Love What Death Doesn’t Touch”

Questioning Capitalist Masculinity in Donna Tartt’s The Goldfinch

part VII|18 pages

Epilogue