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Masculinities under Neoliberalism [Mīkstie vāki]

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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 304 pages, height x width: 216x138 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-May-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Zed Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1783607653
  • ISBN-13: 9781783607655
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 304 pages, height x width: 216x138 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 15-May-2016
  • Izdevniecība: Zed Books Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 1783607653
  • ISBN-13: 9781783607655
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Neoliberalism has had a radical impact on how people perceive and experience gender around the world. But while the impact of this economic and social framework on gender has received significant scholarly attention in the case of women, there has been a dearth of scholarship on how it affects men’s experience and understanding of gender. Building on the work of Cornwall and Lindisfarne’s landmark textDislocating Masculinity, this collection provides a fresh perspective on gender dynamics under neoliberalism.
 
The subjects covered in Masculinities under Neoliberalism range from working class men in Putin’s Russia to colonial masculinities in Southern Rhodesia and from young British Muslim men to amateur footballers in Jamaica, offering a unique glimpse into the lives of men across the globe. The contributors show how neoliberalism has transformed gender relations as well as how we understand and enact masculinity.Masculinities under Neoliberalism holds important implications not only for the study of gender, but also for sociology, development, and postcolonial studies.

Recenzijas

Masculinities under Neoliberalism stands out because of its rich case studies and its timely focus on how masculinities are subject to change in a neoliberal system. * Allegra Laboratory * This book is both a valuable and timely contribution to studies of men and masculinities ... can easily find a place in courses for upper-level undergraduate students or in graduate courses on masculinities, gender, or globalization. * Culture, Society and Masculinities * Readers from a wide range of disciplines will appreciate the far-reaching scope of the volume ... It is a welcome addition to any social science syllabus dealing with gender, capitalism, and the intersection of the two. * Gender, Place and Culture * Masculinities under Neoliberalism is not just an important, comprehensible and extremely timely endeavour to grasp the immeasurable impacts of neoliberal reforms [ the book] is itself a historical document, a product of its own time, written in the incongruous prose of urgency and futility that captures the spirit of today a profound dissection into different life-worlds. * Journal of Extreme Anthropology * Impressive and path-setting ... The contributors have taken a giant step beyond inappropriate generalizing and abstracting in masculinist studies. * Journal of Men's Studies * A thought-provoking, cohesive, and engrossing collection of anthropological research that will be of interest to all masculinity scholars. * Men and Masculinities * /i>'Provides a rich mosaic of masculinities during a period of economic precarity and social fragmentation, and thus offers not only fresh ways of envisioning the various structures of peoples lives, but also contributes to the ongoing topical discussion on masculinities. * Social Anthropology * A powerful mix combining contributions from major figures and emerging stars in masculinities studies. The sparkling analysis throughout should attract new interest and inspire new work in the field. * Matthew Gutmann, Brown University * If, as Schumpeter argued, the essential fact about capitalism is its 'creative destruction,' one of the relationships it disrupts are ideologies of gender. In this essential volume, the authors show how globalization brings dislocation, upheaval, and migrations to older ideas about masculinity, leading to other forms of destabilization. * Michael Kimmel, executive director, Center for the Study of Men and Masculinities * An important and fascinating contribution to global perspectives on what it means to be a man in a time of rising inequality and economic uncertainty. * Nikki van der Gaag, author of Feminism and Men * With its vivid pictures of masculinities under stress in different regions and cultures, Masculinities Under Neoliberalism is a very rich resource for understanding contemporary mens and womens lives. * Raewyn Connell, University of Sydney (Emerita) * In this book we have a rare and rich tapestry of individual and groups of men operating against the vast backdrop of neoliberalism. This is a fine book with a surprisingly hopeful message. * Robert Morell, University of Cape Town * A timely volume with an important introduction by the editors which will set the terms of the debate on issues of men and masculinity for some time to come. The arguments should be accessible to advanced undergraduates as well as graduate students, and the book will be useful in anthropology and gender courses alike. * Sherry B. Ortner, University of Michigan * A wonderful and politically timely collection with a global reach Masculinities under Neoliberalism brings together insightful ethnographic studies that explore changing power and anxieties of men's lives in different cultural contexts. Interdisciplinary and grounded in comparative approaches it explores what is happening to men and masculinities in tense times of global economic crisis and rising inequalities. * Victor Seidler, Goldsmiths, University of London *

Papildus informācija

Provides invaluable new insight into the impact of neoliberalism on masculinity, as well as the lived experiences of myriad men across the globe.
About the contributors viii
Preface xiii
1 Introduction: masculinities under neoliberalism
1(28)
Andrea Cornwall
2 Masculinities and the lived experience of neoliberalism
29(22)
Nancy Lindisfarne
Jonathan Neale
3 In search of `stability': working-class men, masculinity and wellbeing in contemporary Russia
51(15)
Charlie Walker
4 `Filial son', dislocated masculinity and the making of male migrant workers in urban China
66(14)
Xiaodong Lin
5 Taking the long view: attaining and sustaining masculinity across the life course in South India
80(19)
Penny Vera-Sanso
6 Desperate markets and desperate masculinities in Morocco
99(12)
Joe Hayns
7 Neutralized bachelors, infantilized Arabs: between migrant and host -- gendered and sexual stereotypes in Abu Dhabi
111(14)
Jane Bristol-Rhys
Caroline Osella
8 Windsurfers, capoeiristas and musicians: Brazilian masculinities in transnational scenarios
125(11)
Adriana Piscitelli
9 `I must stand like a man': masculinity in crisis in post-war Sierra Leone
136(15)
Luisa Enria
10 Fatherhood and intergenerational struggles in the construction of masculinities in Huambo, Angola
151(14)
John Spall
11 Masculinity, marriage and the Bible: new Pentecostalist masculinities in Zimbabwe
165(18)
Diana Jeater
12 From Big Man to Whole Man: making moral masculinities at the YMCA
183(15)
Ross Wignall
13 (Dis)locating masculinities: ethnographic reflections of British Muslim young men
198(15)
Mairtin Mac An Ghaill
Chris Haywood
14 Football field, bar, and street corner: sports, space, and masculinities in rural Jamaica
213(14)
William Tantam
15 Ducks, dogs, and men: `natural' masculinities in New Zealand duck hunting
227(17)
Carmen Mcleod
16 (Dis)locations of homosociality: men in an all-male university residence hall
244(17)
Frank G. Karioris
17 Homosociality and heterosex: patterns of intimacy and relationality among men in the London `seduction community'
261(16)
Rachel O'Neill
Index 277
Andrea Cornwall is professor of anthropology and international development in the School of Global Studies at Sussex University. She has published widely in the fields of gender and development studies, and is the editor of Dislocating Masculinity: Comparative Ethnographies (with Nancy Lindisfarne, 1994) and Men and Development: Politicising Masculinities (with Jerker Edström and Alan Greig, Zed Books, 2011).

Frank G. Karioris is a doctoral candidate in comparative gender studies, with a specialization in sociology and social anthropology from Central European University in Budapest, Hungary. His dissertation focuses on mens homosocial relations in an all-male university residence hall in the US. He has published in the Institute of Development Studies IDS Bulletin, as well as co-editing the book Reimagining Masculinities (2015).

Nancy Lindisfarne taught social anthropology at SOAS, University of London for many years. She has done anthropological fieldwork in Iran, Afghanistan, in a Turkish town, and among the urban bourgeoisie in Syria. Her publications include Dislocating Masculinity: Comparative Ethnographies (co-edited with Andrea Cornwall, 1994), Bartered Brides: Politics, Gender and Marriage in an Afghan Tribal Society (1991), Languages of Dress in the Middle East (with Bruce Ingham, 1997), Thank God, Were Secular: Gender, Islam and Turkish Republicanism (2001) and a book of short stories, Dancing in Damascus (2000), which also appeared in Arabic and Turkish.