Manhood in America: A Cultural HistoryFree Press, 1996 - 544 pages In a time when psychologists are rediscovering Darwin, and much of our social behavioral is being reduced to ancient, hard-wired patterns, Michael Kimmel's history of manhood in America comes as a much needed reminder that our behavior as men and women is anything but stable and fixed. Kimmel's authoritative, entertaining, and wide-ranging history of men in America demonstrates that manhood has meant very different things in different eras. Drawing on advice books, magazines, political pamphlets, and popular novels and films, he makes two surprising claims: First, manhood is homosocial - that is, men need to prove themselves to each other, not to women. Second, definitions of manliness have evolved in response to women's movements. When women act, men react. Originally, manliness was an internal virtue and a democratic ideal - British men were viewed as fops, and American men had to be independent, honest, and responsible. By the 1890s, however, manhood changed to masculinity, something that had to be constantly proven through the new explosion of sports, fraternities, and fashion. Finally, in 1936, Lewis Terman, the creator of the IQ test, developed an "M-F" test to analyze adolescents' masculinity and femininity. Until well into the 1960s, the test penalized boys who preferred to draw flowers instead of forests, or who knew that a teacup was used for drinking tea. But just as Terman's categories and questions seem outdated to us, so will our own standards seem temporary to our successors. |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 57
Page 53
... workplace became harder , the home softer . The casual conviviality of the workplace was fast disap- pearing in the new world of the factory system and mass production . Time and work discipline increasingly ruled . Outside the home was ...
... workplace became harder , the home softer . The casual conviviality of the workplace was fast disap- pearing in the new world of the factory system and mass production . Time and work discipline increasingly ruled . Outside the home was ...
Page 118
... workplace , now a site of uneasiness . What had for- merly been the central arena in which self - making men had made themselves had now become unreliable , tenuous . Changes in the na- ture of work itself and changes in the composition ...
... workplace , now a site of uneasiness . What had for- merly been the central arena in which self - making men had made themselves had now become unreliable , tenuous . Changes in the na- ture of work itself and changes in the composition ...
Page 310
... workplace is no longer the literal testing ground . Tom Wolfe's satiric novel The Bonfire of the Vanities sounded a hilariously near - hysterical elegy for the yuppie 1980s , an era of bond traders , " head hunters , " and arbitrageurs ...
... workplace is no longer the literal testing ground . Tom Wolfe's satiric novel The Bonfire of the Vanities sounded a hilariously near - hysterical elegy for the yuppie 1980s , an era of bond traders , " head hunters , " and arbitrageurs ...
Contents
The Birth of the SelfMade Man | 13 |
SelfControl and Fantasies of Escape | 43 |
Captains of Industry White Collars | 81 |
Copyright | |
8 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
American manhood argued Barbara Ehrenreich baseball become Bernarr Macfadden Billy Sunday Boston celebrated Chicago cited City Civil claimed Coeducation cowboy culinity cultural feminization Culture D+N+ David decades domestic economic Education effeminacy effeminate efforts emasculated fantasy father fear feel female feminine feminist feminization film fraternal frontier gender George girls hero Heroic Artisan History homosexual homosocial hood ideal James Jesus John labor Leslie Fiedler liberation lives magazine male bonding man's manly masculinist masculinity men's men's liberation men's movement men's rights middle-class moral mother movement Muscular Christianity nation nineteenth century novel Owen Wister Oxford University Press percent Pleck political Pro-Feminist Men race rituals Robert role Self-Made sexual social society sons sphere success Theodore Roosevelt tion traditional transformed turn urban Victorian virility virtue William wimp Wister woman women workers workplace writes wrote York young