War, Battering, and Other Sports: The Gulf Between American Men and WomenThis work explores the relationship between male games and violence against women by examining various theoretical rubrics, including the classic authoritarian personality model of Adorno and Sanford. It also looks at Girard's theory of scapegoating, androcentrism and other theories. |
Contents
Phallic and Castration | 35 |
Football Metaphors | 77 |
An Alternative | 177 |
Copyright | |
1 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
War, Battering, and Other Sports: The Gulf Between American Men and Women James Mcbride No preview available - 1995 |
War, Battering, and Other Sports: The Gulf Between American Men and Women James Mcbride No preview available - 1995 |
Common terms and phrases
abuse aggression allegedly American androcentric anxiety argued assault authoritarian authoritarian personality ball Bataille battered women become behavior blood body bomb castration anxiety child coaches David Kopay death defense depicted Desert Storm desire domestic violence domination embodies enemy eyes father fear feel feminist football gender Georges Bataille Girard Gulf Gulf War Hitler homosexual homosocial homosocial community hostility human Ibid identity Iraq Iraqi Irigaray Iron John January Keen Kuwait Luce Irigaray male imaginary male territorial games manhood masculinist psychic economy masculinity men's movement metaphor military mimetic rivalry mother National offensive outgroup patriarchal culture patriarchal social order penetration percent phallic phallus physical play players political president quarterback rape René Girard reported rhetoric ritual victim role sacrifice sacrificial victim Saddam Hussein scapegoat Schwartzkopf seems sexual Sigmund Freud society suggests Superbowl taboo Tailhook television tion torture trans transgression truth viewers violence against women Western woman York