Contemporary Masculinities in Fiction, Film and Television

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While masculinity has been an increasingly visible field of study within several disciplines (sociology, literary studies, cultural studies, film and tv) over the last two decades, it is surprising that analysis of contemporary representations of the first part of the century has yet to emerge. Professor Brian Baker, evolving from his previous work Masculinities in Fiction and Film: Representing Men in Popular Genres 1945-2000, intervenes to rectify the scholarship in the field to produce a wide-ranging, readable text that deals with films and other texts produced since the year 2000. Focusing on representations of masculinity in cinema, popular fiction and television from the period 2000-2010, he argues that dominant forms of masculinity in Britain and the United States have become increasingly informed by anxiety, trauma and loss, and this has resulted in both narratives that reflect that trauma and others which attempt to return to a more complete and heroic form of masculinity. While focusing on a range of popular genres, such as Bond films, war movies, science fiction and the Gothic, the work places close analyses of individual films and texts in their cultural and historical contexts, arguing for the importance of these popular fictions in diagnosing how contemporary Britain and the United States understand themselves and their changing role in the world through the representation of men, fully recognising the issues of race/ethnicity, class, sexuality, and age. Baker draws upon current work in mobility studies and in the study of masculinities to produce the first book-length comparative study of masculinity in popular culture of the first decade of the twentieth century.

Author(s): Brian Baker
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Year: 2016

Language: English
Pages: 272
City: London

Cover
Half-title
Title
Copyright
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part 1: Narratives of Power
1. Gallivanting Around the World
The metaphysics of mobility
The Tourist Gaze
Vertigo and free running
After Casino Royale: The traumatized Bond
2. Masters and Commanders
The exploded male body
The soldier and trauma
Modernism and the war machine
Patrick O’Brian’s Aubrey/Maturin novels
3. American Hearts of Darkness
From Republic to Empire
Empire masculinities
Apocalypse Now (Redux)
The Hurt Locker
4. The Special Relationship
Dramatic structure
Television
Homosociality: The Special Relationship
The legacy of Tony Blair
Part 2: Science Fiction
5. The Enclave
Code 46
Never Let Me Go
28 Days Later and 28 Weeks Later
6. Dystopia and the Apocalyptic Scene
Children of Men
V for Vendetta
7. Alien Nations
War of the Worlds
Star Trek Into Darkness
Monsters
Alien Nations
8. Everybody Runs
The Time Traveler’s Wife
Minority Report
9. Annihilations
The sublime
Technicity and the artificial subject
Part 3: Gothic/Horror/The Fantastic
10. Tape Spectra
Haunted technologies
Technology and trauma
11. Orpheus Descending
12. Lecter
Hannibal Lecter
Lecter and Romantic Satanism
Revising Lecter: Hannibal Rising and the televisual Hannibal
13. The Angels and the Damned
From conspiracy to theology
The mobility and geography of murder
Towards apocalypse
Life on Mars?
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index