ABSTRACT

For years, research concerning masculinities has explored the way that men have dominated, exploited, and dismantled societies, asking how we might make sense of marginalized masculinities in the context of male privilege. This volume asks not only how terms such as men and masculinity are socially defined and culturally instantiated, but also how the media has constructed notions of masculinity that have kept minority masculinities on the margins. Essays explore marginalized masculinities as communicated through film, television, and new media, visiting representations and marginalized identity politics while also discussing the dangers and pitfalls of a media pedagogy that has taught audiences to ignore, sidestep, and stereotype marginalized group realities. While dominant portrayals of masculine versus feminine characters pervade numerous television and film examples, this collection examines heterosexual and queer, military and civilian, as well as Black, Japanese, Indian, White, and Latino masculinities, offering a variance in masculinities and confronting male privilege as represented on screen, appealing to a range of disciplines and a wide scope of readers.

chapter |16 pages

Preface

Communicating Marginalized Masculinities

chapter |16 pages

1 Kairos, Kanye and Katrina

Online Meditations on Race and Masculinity

chapter |16 pages

2 “Is that a PC in Your Pocket, or is it Something More?”

The Newton PDA and White-Collar Masculinity

chapter |16 pages

3 Competing South Asian Mas(k)ulinities

Bollywood Icons versus “Tech-N-Talk”

chapter |15 pages

4 Color and Movement

The Male Dancer, Masculinity and Race in Movies

chapter |19 pages

5 A Gendered Shell Game

Masculinity and Race in District 9

chapter |15 pages

6 The Evolution of an Identity

GI Joe and Black Masculinity

chapter |14 pages

7 A “Vocabulary of Feeling”

Japanese American Masculinity in Conscience and the Constitution

chapter |16 pages

8 Fat, Sass and Laughs

Black Masculinity in Drag

chapter |15 pages

9 Narrating the Presidential “Race”

Barack Obama and the American Dream

chapter |15 pages

10 The Man in the Box

Masculinity and Race in Popular Television

chapter |15 pages

11 White Masculinity and the TV Sitcom Dad

Tracing the “Progression” of Portrayals of Fatherhood

chapter |14 pages

12 From Album Novel to Cowboy Soap Opera

Melancholia, Race and Carnival in the Multi-Media Works of Mario Prata

chapter |15 pages

13 Smooth and Latin

Reflections on Mario Lopez, Ballroom Dancing and Latino Masculinity

chapter |15 pages

14 “State Property” and Friends

Black Men's Performances of Masculinity and Race in Prison