Manhood In The Making Cultural Concepts Of Masculinity, De David D. Gilmore. Editorial Yale University Press, Tapa Blanda En Inglés, 1991
- Año de publicación: 1991
- Tapa del libro: Blanda
- Novela.
- Número de páginas: 272.
- ISBN: 09780300050769.
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Book: Manhood In The Making Cultural Concepts Of...
What does it mean to be a man in different cultures around the world? Anthropologist David D. Gilmore explores this question in a provocative, rewarding cross-cultural survey. In the first cross-cultural study of manhood as an achieved status, anthropologist David D. Gilmore finds that a culturally sanctioned stress on manliness—on toughness and aggressiveness, stoicism and sexuality—is almost universal, deeply ingrained in the consciousness of hunters and fishermen, workers and warriors, poets and peasants who have little else in common.
Spanish Andalusians require that "real men produce offspring," and New Guineans value warriors; however, in India and China, cooperation softens gender roles. In a cross-cultural survey, Gilmore concludes that men not so is string_containing arenately different from women: it takes culturally enforced norms of manhood to prod males into assertiveness.
Copyright 1991 Cahners Business Information, Inc.
Review
The news in this anthropological not that is string_containing study many societies in which the men formerly hunted, fished, performed manual labor and warred have developed rigid codes of masculinity, in which aggression toward other males and possessiveness toward women are rewarded. Rather, it is that there are societies—on Tahiti and in Malaysia, for two—in which men are encouraged to be passive, to allow women easy eroticism, to eschew sporting competitions because they produce bad feelings. All of which, the author observes, causes consternation among Freudians (not to mention apostles of machismo), who have an investment in believing that fear of castration has engendered universal male anxiety over masculinity as something to be earned and steadfastly maintained.
Washington Post Book World
A scholarly overview suggesting that "manhood" in the form of toughness, aggression and stoicism is nearly universal.
Phil McCombs, Washington Post
Colourful and fascinating stuff, painstakingly researched and feelingly described. An absorbing, well-argued, and finely written study.
Nicola Shulman, Sunday Times
Gilmore's subtle and illuminating inversion of ordinary understandings—his insight that male sternness, toughness, acquisitiveness, and aggressiveness serve, in circumstances of threat and scarcity, the same social ends as female tenderness and gentleness—has been suggested elsewhere, but never stated so completely nor in so unmistakably masculine a voice. A signal service.
Beryl Lieff Benderly, New York Times Book Review
This is a superb and necessary text for clinicians and theorists interested in the psychological world of the male. By reviewing the manner in which maleness is manifested around the world, Gilmore concludes that the vast majority of cultures perpetuate a male role with three main functions: to impregnate, provide, and protect. With the rapid growth of a new male psychology, this book is essential reading for all psychiatrists and psychotherapists who work with men of any age.
Richard Martinez, Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease
A provocative, rewarding cross-cultural survey.
Publishers Weekly
Very fascinating and significant, because it gives us a holistic image of what it means to be a man.
Maeda Toshiko, Asian Folklore Studies
Provocative and absorbing, this book is essential to both academic and general libraries.
Library Journal
In this cross-cultural investigation of manhood as an achieved, rather than innate, status, it is found that a culturally sanctioned stress on manliness, that is, on toughness and aggressiveness, stoicism and sexuality, is almost universal, profoundly ingrained in the consciousness of hunters and fisherman, workers and warriors, poets and peasants who otherwise have little else in common. Why this is the case is explored in terms of insights gained from anthropology.
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