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American Masculinities in Contemporary Documentary Film

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American Masculinities in Contemporary Documentary Film Synopsis

Most documentaries deal with men, but what do they actually say about masculinity? In this groundbreaking volume Sara Martìn analyses more than forty 21st-century documentaries to explore how they represent American men and masculinity.

From Jennifer Siebel Newsom's The Mask You Live In to Raoul Peck's I Am Not Your Negro, this volume explores sixteen different faces of American masculinity: the good man, the activist, the politician, the whistleblower, the criminal, the sexual abuser, the wrongly accused, the dependent man, the soldier, the capitalist, the adventurer, the sportsman, the architect, the photographer, the musician, and the writer. The collective portrait drawn by the documentaries discloses a firm critical stance against the contradictions inherent in patriarchy, which makes American men promises of empowerment it cannot fulfill. The filmmakers' view of American masculinity emphasizes the vulnerability of disempowered men before the abuses of the patriarchal system run by hegemonic men and a loss of bearings about how to be a man after the impact of feminism, accompanied nonetheless by a celebration of resilient masculinity and of the good American man.

Firmly positioning documentaries as an immensely flexible, relevant tool to understand 21st-century American men and masculinity, their past, present, and future, this book will interest students and scholars of film studies, documentary film, American cultural studies, gender, and masculinity.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781032422343
Publication date:
Author: Sara Martín
Publisher: Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 252 pages
Series: Routledge Advances in Film Studies
Genres: Documentary films
Popular culture
Media studies
Gender studies, gender groups
Regional / International studies
History