Masculinity in Crisis: Myths, Fantasies, and Realities

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St. Martin's Press, 1994 - Gender identity - 210 pages
This book argues that masculine identity is in deep crisis in Western culture - the old forms are disintegrating, while men struggle to establish new relations with women and with each other.
This book offers a fresh look at gender, particularly masculinity, by using material from the author's work as a psychotherapist. The book also considers the contrubtions made by feminism, sociology and anthropology to the study of gender, and suggests that it must be studied from an interdisciplinary standpoint.
Masculity is seen to have economic, political and psychological roots, but the concrete development of gender must be traced in the relations of the male infant with his parents. Here the young boy has to separate from his mother, and his own proto-feminine identity, and identify with his father - but in Western culture fathering is often deficient.
Male identity is shown to be fractured, fragile and truncated. Men are trained to be rational and violent, and to shut out whole areas of existence and feeling. Many stereotypes imprison men - particularly machismo, which is shown to be deeply masochistic and self-destructive.

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Contents

Growing Up
167
Conclusions
182
Notes
188
Copyright

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About the author (1994)

Roger Horrocks is a filmaker and biographer of the New Zealand film and television industries. He has made a contribution to both of these industries in New Zealand since the 1970s, which was recognised in 2004 when he was made a Member of the New Zealand Order of Merit. He founded the Department of Film, Television and Media Studies at The University of Auckland, co-founded the Auckland International Arts Festival, Alternative Cinema, Artspace, NZ On Air and NZ On Screen, and served on many industry boards. He is a director of documentary film company Point of View Productions. He is an expert on the life and work of New Zealand born artist and filmmaker Len Lye and wrote the biography Len Lye. He also wrote Art That Moves on Lye's work, and the libretto for Len Lye: The Opera. He has been a contributing editor to noted literary magazines such as And, Splash and Parallax. His book, Song of the Ghost in the Machine was published in 2015.

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