This groundbreaking work examines the long-ignored issue of masculinity and masculine identity in German culture, society, and literature, from 1945 to the present. Utilizing emerging men’s studies theories, feminism, psychoanalysis, and literary studies, the book provides a resource for understanding how masculinity informs homosocial, male-female, and adult-child relations. Psychologists, literary scholars, and philosophers survey the current state of men’s studies in the German academy, the representation of masculinity in postwar German literature, the psychic legacies of fascism, Turkish-German masculinities, Jewish-German masculinities, Neo-Nazi masculine identity, and the relationship between child sexual abuse and masculinity. Most significantly, the book offers tools for critical reflection on how men maintain power over women and other less powerful groups.
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Acknowledgments
Part I. Introductory Considerations
Introduction
Roy Jerome
Hard-Cold-Fast: Imagining Masculinity in the German Academy, Literature, and the Media
Klaus-Michael Bogdal
Part II. Theoretical Considerations to the Problematic of Postwar German Masculine Identity
An Interview with Tilmann Moser on Trauma, Therapeutic Technique, and the Constitution of Masculinity in the Sons of the National Socialist Generation
Roy Jerome
Paralysis, Silence, and the Unknown SS-Father: A Therapeutic Case Study on the Return of the Third Reich in Psychotherapy
Tilmann Moser
The German-Jewish Hyphen: Conjunct, Disjunct, or Adjunct?
Harry Brod
Masculinity and Sexual Abuse in Postwar German Society
Klaus-Jurgen Bruder
Part III. Reading Masculinity in Postwar German Literature
The Motif of the Man, Who, Although He Loves, Goes to War: On the History of the Construction of Masculinity in the European Tradition
Carl Pietzcker
I have only you, Cassandra: Antifeminism and the Reconstruction of Patriarchy in the Early Postwar Works of Hans Erich Nossack
Inge Stephan
Brutal Heroes, Human Marionettes, and Men with Bitter Knowledge: On the New Formulation of Masculinity in the Literature of the Young Generation after 1945 (W. Borchert, H. Boll, and A. Andersch)
Hans-Gerd Winter
Vaterliteratur, Masculinity, and History: The Melancholic Texts of the 1980s
Barbara Kosta
Homosexual Images of Masculinity in German-Language Literature after 1945
Wolfgang Popp
Neo-Nazi or Neo-Man? The Possibilities for the Transformation of Masculine Identity in Kafka and Hasselbach
Russell West
Multiple Masculinities in Turkish-German Men’s Writing
Moray Mc Gowan
Afterword
Michael Kimmel
Contributors
Index
Giới thiệu về tác giả
Roy Jerome received his Ph.D. in German Literature. He is currently completing a program in Clinical Psychology at Teacher’s College, Columbia University, where he concentrates on psychoanalytic theories of masculinity, men’s mental health, trauma, and violence.