Ulteriori informazioni
Informationen zum Autor Stefan Dudink is Assistant Professor of Gay and Lesbian Studies at the Centre for Women’s and Gender Studies, Nijmegen University, The Netherlands Karen Hagemann is Professor of History and Co-Director of the Centre for Border Studies of the School for Humanities and Social Sciences at the University of Glamorgan John Tosh is Professor of History, University of Surrey, Roehampton, United Kingdom Klappentext This book opens up new avenues in gender history by mapping masculinity's part in making revolution, waging war, building nations, and constructing welfare states. Written in a highly accessible style, targeted at both students, professional historians and the interested general reader. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of figuresList of contributorsAcknowledgementsPreface Part I Masculinities in politics and war: Introductions1. Masculinity in politics and war in the age of democratic revolutions, 1750-1850 - Stefan Dudink and Karen Hagemann2. Masculinity in politics and war in the age of nation-states and World Wars, 1850-1950 - John Horne3. Hegemonic masculinity and the history of gender - John ToshPart II Historicising revolutionary masculinity: Constructs and contexts4. The republican gentleman: The race to rhetorical stability in the new United States - Carroll Smith-Rosenberg5. Masculinity, effeminacy, time: Conceptual change in the Dutch age of democratic revolutions - Stefan Dudink6. Republican citizenship and heterosocial desire: Concepts of masculinity in revolutionary France - Joan B. Landes7. German heroes: The cult of death for the fatherland in nineteenth-century Germany - Karen HagemannPart III Gendering the nation: Hegemonic masculinity and its Others8. 'Brothers of the Iranian race': Manhood, nationhood, and modernity in Iran c.1870-1914 - Joanna de Groot9. Hegemonic masculinity in Afrikaner nationalist mobilisation, 1934-1948 - Jacobus Adriaan du Pisani10. Temperate heroes: Concepts of masculinity in Second World War Britain - Sonya O. RosePart IV Analysing power relations: The politics of masculinity11. Translating needs into rights: The discursive imperative of the Australian white man, 1901-1930 - Marilyn Lake12. Measures for masculinity: The American labor movement and welfare state policy during the Great Depression - Alice Kessler-Harris13. Masculinities, nations, and the new world order: Gendered discourses on peacemaking and nationality in Britain, France and the United States after the First World War - Glenda SlugaPart V Including the subject: masculinity and subjectivity14. The political man: The construction of masculinity in German Social Democracy, 1848-1878 - Thomas Welskopp15. Making workers masculine: The (re)construction of male worker identity in twentieth-century Brazil - Barbara Weinstein16. Maternal relations: Moral manliness and emotional survival in letters home during the First World War - Michael Roper...