Mapping South Asian masculinities : men and political crises

書誌事項

Mapping South Asian masculinities : men and political crises

edited by Chandrima Chakraborty

(South Asian history and culture)

Routledge, 2017, c2015

  • : pbk

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注記

Originally published in South Asian history and culture, v. 5, issue 4 (Oct. 2014)

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This book offers the first substantial critical examination of men and masculinities in relation to political crises in South Asian literatures and cultures. It employs political crisis as a frame to analyze how South Asian men and masculinities have been shaped by critical historical events, events which have redrawn maps and remapped or unmapped bodies with different effects. These include colonialism, anti-colonialism, state formations, civil wars, religious conflicts, and migration. Political crisis functions as a framing device to offer nuances and clarifications to the assumed visibility of male bodies and male activities during political crisis. The focus on masculinities in historical moments of crisis divests masculinity of its naturalization and calls for a heterogeneous conceptualization of the everyday practices and experiences of 'being a man.' Written by scholars from a variety of theoretical perspectives and disciplinary approaches, and drawing on a range of written and visual texts, this book contributes to this recent rethinking of South Asian literary and cultural history by engaging masculinity as a historicized category of analysis that accommodates an understanding of history as differentiated encounters among bodies, cultures, and nations. This book was originally published as a special issue of South Asian History and Culture.

目次

Introduction - Mapping South Asian masculinities: men and political crises Section I: The Past and the Present 1. Uncles of the nation: avuncular masculinity in partition-era politics 2. Valour, violence and the ethics of struggle: constructing militant masculinities in Sri Lanka 3. Once were warriors: the militarized state in narrating the past 4. Limp wrists, inflammatory punches: violence, masculinity, and queer sexuality in Shyam Selvadurai's Funny Boy 5. Daniyal Mueenuddin's dying men Section II: Migratory Routes 6. Recuperating Indian masculinity: Mohandas Gandhi, war and the Indian diaspora in South Africa (1899-1914) 7. 'My name is Khan and I am not a terrorist': disability and asexuality in My Name is Khan 8. Representing diasporic masculinities in post-9/11 era: the tragedy versus the comedy 9. 'Bling-bling economics' and the cultural politics of masculinity in Gautam Malkani's Londonstani

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