Skip to main content
Taylor & Francis Group Logo
Advanced Search

Click here to search books using title name,author name and keywords.

  • Login
  • Hi, User  
    • Your Account
    • Logout
Advanced Search

Click here to search books using title name,author name and keywords.

Breadcrumbs Section. Click here to navigate to respective pages.

Book

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Man

Book

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Man

DOI link for Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Man

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Man book

Psychoanalysis and Masculinity

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Man

DOI link for Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Man

Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Man book

Psychoanalysis and Masculinity
ByDonald Moss
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2012
eBook Published 28 May 2012
Pub. Location London
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203105993
Pages 176
eBook ISBN 9780203105993
Subjects Area Studies, Behavioral Sciences, Humanities, Social Sciences
Share
Share

Get Citation

Moss, D. (2012). Thirteen Ways of Looking at a Man: Psychoanalysis and Masculinity (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780203105993

ABSTRACT

Images and ideas associated with masculinity are forever in flux. In this book, Donald Moss addresses the never-ending effort of men—regardless of sexual orientation—to shape themselves in relation to the unstable notion of masculinity.

Part 1 looks at the lifelong labor faced by boys and men of assessing themselves in relation to an always shifting, always receding, ideal of "masculinity." In Part 2, Moss considers a series of nested issues regarding homosexuality, homophobia and psychoanalysis. Part 3 focuses on the interface between the body experienced as a private entity and the body experienced as a public entity—the body experienced as one’s own and the body subject to the judgments, regulations and punishments of the external world. The final part looks at men and violence. Men must contend with the entwined problems of regulating aggression and figuring out its proper level, aiming to avoid both excess and insufficiency. This section focuses on excessive aggression and its damaging consequences, both to its object and to its subjects.

Thirteen Ways Of Looking At A Man will be of great interest not only to psychoanalysts and psychotherapists, but also to a much wider audience of readers interested in gender studies, queer studies, and masculinity.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter 1|8 pages

Masculinity as masquerade

chapter 2|10 pages

Immaculate attachment vs passive yearning: thoughts on being and becoming a man

chapter |3 pages

First aside: Ted

chapter 3|19 pages

On neither being nor becoming a man

chapter 4|9 pages

Two ways of looking back

chapter 5|13 pages

Psychoanalysis and male homosexuality/the ideal of neutrality

chapter 6|20 pages

Internalized homophobia in men: wanting in the first-person singular, hating in the first-person plural

chapter 7|15 pages

On situating homophobia

chapter 8|17 pages

Freud’s “female homosexual”: one way of looking at a woman

chapter |2 pages

Second aside: Little Richard

chapter 9|11 pages

Looking at a transsexual

chapter 10|9 pages

War stories

chapter |5 pages

Epilogue

T&F logoTaylor & Francis Group logo
  • Policies
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Cookie Policy
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    • Cookie Policy
  • Journals
    • Taylor & Francis Online
    • CogentOA
    • Taylor & Francis Online
    • CogentOA
  • Corporate
    • Taylor & Francis Group
    • Taylor & Francis Group
    • Taylor & Francis Group
    • Taylor & Francis Group
  • Help & Contact
    • Students/Researchers
    • Librarians/Institutions
    • Students/Researchers
    • Librarians/Institutions
  • Connect with us

Connect with us

Registered in England & Wales No. 3099067
5 Howick Place | London | SW1P 1WG © 2021 Informa UK Limited