Masculinity at the Movies takes a deep dive into masculinity in film and how Hollywood movies continue to produce and promote masculine stereotypes that place boys and men in constraining identities and dysfunctional patterns of behaviour.
From classic film stars to those of the present day, this textbook unpacks the development of the main male stereotypes in film villains, heroes and oafs and how movies can develop healthy new male representations. Alongside Hollywood studio productions, it delves into Black, Native American, Latino and Asian representation as well as LGBTQ masculinity. Going beyond the present, it proposes what healthy masculinity at the movies looks like and where Hollywood should set its sights to create more progressive models of masculinity for the 21st century.
Masculinity at the Movies will provide students of gender studies, media studies, and cultural studies with new insights into stereotypes of men in contemporary film.
Masculinity at the Movies takes a deep dive into masculinity in film and how Hollywood movies continue to produce and promote masculine stereotypes that place boys and men in constraining patterns of behaviour. It is valuable text for students of Gender Studies, Media Studies, and Cultural Studies.
Introduction
1. How a Century of Movies Shaped Masculinity
2. Heroes,
Villains, and Oafs, Oh My!
3. Black Masculinity at the Movies
4. Invisible
Men: Native Men at the Movies
5. Reel Latinos
6. The Evolution of Asian
Masculinity in Film
7. LGBTQ Masculine Representation
8. Animated Masculinity
9. Its Just a Joke!
10. Healthy Masculine Representation in Film
Thomas Keith teaches philosophy and gender studies at California State Polytechnic University, Pomona, and Claremont Graduate University. He has written, directed, and produced numerous films, including Generation M: Misogyny in Media and Culture and The Bro Code: How Contemporary Culture Creates Sexist Men.