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El. knyga: Pure Fatherhood and the Hollywood Family Film

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This book maps father failure and redemption through three decades of Hollywood family films, revealing how libertarian notions that align agency with autonomy lead to new conflicts for the contemporary father. The films find resolution to these conflicts through a re-gendering of parenting as relationship. In their creation of a ‘pure’ fatherhood that is valorised as authentic for its lack of parental responsibilities, the films serve to challenge the perception that fathering enacted outside the nuclear family structure is fragile. McNulty Norton finds in the films a new essentialism that secures the pure relationship to the biological father, reinforcing his position in the face of changing family forms.

1 Introduction
1(14)
The Film Father
4(1)
Definitions and Situating the Analysis
5(3)
Outline of
Chapters
8(2)
References
10(5)
Part I Setting the Scene
2 Hollywood Family Films and the Father Protagonist
15(22)
The Emergence of the Father Protagonist
16(2)
The Nurturing Father
18(1)
Child Audiences and the Father Protagonist
19(3)
The Film Set
22(4)
The Disengaged Father Film
26(1)
Demographic Makeup of the Films
27(4)
References
31(6)
3 Being a Good Father
37(22)
The Essential Father
38(3)
Father Time
41(1)
Father Involvement as Intimate Relationship
42(5)
The Possibility of a `Pure' Father-Child Relationship
47(3)
Agentic Children and the Construction of Family
50(2)
Innocence and Redemption
52(2)
Conclusion
54(1)
References
55(4)
4 Methodological Considerations
59(16)
Barnes on Agency
60(2)
Defining Voluntaristic Discourses
62(1)
The Agentic `Individual' and Other Statuses
63(3)
Critical Discourse Analysis--Focusing on the Social
66(2)
Critical Discourse Analysis and Films
68(3)
References
71(4)
Part II Changing Expectations of the Father
5 Choice
75(22)
The Father's Failure Rendered as `Choice' of Work
76(4)
Nurture and Choice in Father Films
80(3)
Essentialising the Father
83(4)
From Essentialised Tasks to Unique Relationship
87(1)
Choice in Mrs Doubtfire
88(5)
Conclusion
93(1)
References
94(3)
6 Precarity and Risk
97(20)
Precarity within the Home
98(4)
Winners and Losers in the Workplace
102(7)
Risk and the Other Man
109(2)
The Masculinity Dilemma
111(2)
Conclusion
113(1)
References
114(3)
7 Responsibility
117(18)
The Taxonomy of Responsibility
118(2)
The Responsible Mother
120(4)
The Independent Child
124(3)
Breadwinning, Responsibility and the Hollywood Father
127(1)
The Black Family--Deadbeat Dads and Insufficient Mothers
128(3)
References
131(4)
8 Locating Blame
135(22)
Routes to Obligation
136(1)
Obligations Based on Being a Breadwinner
137(2)
Obligations Based on Commitments Given
139(1)
Obligation Based on Virtue
140(3)
Responsibility-as-Virtue and the Cowboy Father
143(3)
Responsibility for Securing the Father-Child Relationship
146(6)
Conclusion
152(1)
References
153(4)
9 Voice
157(24)
The Pure Father--Learning to Listen and to Communicate Emotion
158(8)
The Voiced Child
166(8)
The Agentic Child--The Loss of Innocence and Unconditional Love
174(2)
Conclusion
176(1)
References
177(4)
10 Conclusion
181(10)
The Father
182(3)
The Mother and Child
185(2)
Final Thoughts
187(2)
References
189(2)
Appendix 191(4)
Index 195
Denise McNulty Norton is an independent researcher. Her research interests include the sociology of free will and the discursive construction of family.