The Media and the Models of Masculinity

Author:   Mark Moss
Publisher:   Lexington Books
ISBN:  

9780739166260


Pages:   222
Publication Date:   02 February 2012
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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The Media and the Models of Masculinity


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Full Product Details

Author:   Mark Moss
Publisher:   Lexington Books
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.40cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 23.30cm
Weight:   0.345kg
ISBN:  

9780739166260


ISBN 10:   0739166263
Pages:   222
Publication Date:   02 February 2012
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1 Preface Chapter 2 Intro Chapter 3 Chapter 1: History and Theory Chapter 4 Chapter 2: The Media and Men Chapter 5 Chapter 3: Masculine Adornment Chapter 6 Chapter 4: The Media and Men II Chapter 7 Chapter 5: History Revisited Chapter 8 Chapter 6: The Impact of the Fifties: The Slacker, The Dude and The Rebel Chapter 9 Chapter 7: Masculinity, Media and Aggression Chapter 10 Chapter 8: Notes on Men and Technology Chapter 11 Chapter 9: The Objects on Men's Desks Chapter 12 Chapter 10: Sport and Media Culture Chapter 13 Conclusion

Reviews

The Media and Models of Masculinity is a thorough and pragmatic look at what and why men consume. From car culture to men's magazines, Moss navigates the complicated contemporary landscape where men must compete, prove and win their way toward an ever-elusive sense of stability. The book provides a useful overview of a host of mediatized objects and predilections that men seem compelled to embrace and disavow simultaneously. -- Derek A. Burrill In The Media and Models of Masculinity, Mark Moss presents a fascinating and incisive survey of the various ways masculinity is portrayed and embodied in the popular media. Informed by an arsenal of theories from the fields of sociology, media, and cultural studies, Moss deftly dissects the visual codes and conventions through which masculine identities have been written and re-written since the early twentieth century. Always perceptive and absorbing, the analysis draws on a wonderfully rich range of topics and case-studies--stretching from popular films and TV series to magazines, sports, and interior design. Lively, clued-up, and sharply observed, the book makes a thoroughly worthy contribution to a developing field. -- Osgerby, Bill Masculinity studies is on a roll. Two decades after Robert Bly heated up the men's movement with Iron John: A Book about Men (CH, Mar'91, 28-4189), research on men has reached a boiling point. Also author of Toward the Visualization of History (CH, Jun'09, 46-5760) and other works, Moss raids two decades of research in interdisciplinary areas intersecting with masculinity studies--literature, popular culture, history, media. It is a platitude in academia that researchers either purvey new ideas or synthesize the ideas of others. Moss tends toward the latter, surveying hundreds of books and articles, some published as recently as 2010 (the bibliography runs ten pages). Still, he breaks new ground in chapter 6, The Impact of the 1950s, in which he shows the origins in that decade of male archetypes of the present time (slacker, dude, rebel). Beyond that, he takes on metrosexuality, the special relationship men have with their cars, the objects on a man's desk as an extension of his identity, and sports infotainment on cable and satellite television. Moss has a penchant for the passive voice, but his prose is otherwise clear. Readers unfamiliar with masculinity studies would do well to start here. Choice


The Media and Models of Masculinity is a thorough and pragmatic look at what and why men consume. From car culture to men's magazines, Moss navigates the complicated contemporary landscape where men must compete, prove and win their way toward an ever-elusive sense of stability. The book provides a useful overview of a host of mediatized objects and predilections that men seem compelled to embrace and disavow simultaneously. -- Derek A. Burrill, University of California, Riverside In The Media and Models of Masculinity, Mark Moss presents a fascinating and incisive survey of the various ways masculinity is portrayed and embodied in the popular media. Informed by an arsenal of theories from the fields of sociology, media, and cultural studies, Moss deftly dissects the visual codes and conventions through which masculine identities have been written and re-written since the early twentieth century. Always perceptive and absorbing, the analysis draws on a wonderfully rich range of topics and case-studies--stretching from popular films and TV series to magazines, sports, and interior design. Lively, clued-up, and sharply observed, the book makes a thoroughly worthy contribution to a developing field. -- Bill Osgerby, London Metropolitan University Masculinity studies is on a roll. Two decades after Robert Bly heated up the men's movement with Iron John: A Book about Men (CH, Mar'91, 28-4189), research on men has reached a boiling point. Also author of Toward the Visualization of History (CH, Jun'09, 46-5760) and other works, Moss raids two decades of research in interdisciplinary areas intersecting with masculinity studies--literature, popular culture, history, media. It is a platitude in academia that researchers either purvey new ideas or synthesize the ideas of others. Moss tends toward the latter, surveying hundreds of books and articles, some published as recently as 2010 (the bibliography runs ten pages). Still, he breaks new ground in chapter 6, 'The Impact of the 1950s,' in which he shows the origins in that decade of male archetypes of the present time (slacker, dude, rebel). Beyond that, he takes on metrosexuality, the special relationship men have with their cars, the objects on a man's desk as an extension of his identity, and sports 'infotainment' on cable and satellite television. Moss has a penchant for the passive voice, but his prose is otherwise clear. Readers unfamiliar with masculinity studies would do well to start here. CHOICE


Author Information

Mark Moss spent the last sixteen years as a teacher, coordinator, and administrator at Seneca College. Currently, he is a writer and consultant living in Toronto. This is his fourth book.

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