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Michael Kimmel is Distinguished Professor of Sociology at Stony Brook University, State University of New York. A leading researcher and writer on gender and men and masculinity, he is the author of numerous books and articles including The Gendered Society Reader, Fifth Edition (with Amy Aronson, mehr anzeigen OUP, 2013), Guyland: The Perilous World Where Boys Become Men (2009), and Manhood in America: A Cultural History, Third Edition (OUP, 2012). weniger anzeigen

Werke von Michael S. Kimmel

The Gendered Society (2000) 210 Exemplare
Men's Lives (1989) 195 Exemplare
The Gendered Society Reader (2000) 170 Exemplare
Privilege: A Reader (2003) — Herausgeber — 82 Exemplare
Men Confront Pornography (1990) 61 Exemplare
Classical Sociological Theory (2006) 9 Exemplare
Sociology Now (My Soclab) (2008) 1 Exemplar
Sociology Now, Census Update (2011) 1 Exemplar
Masculinities 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Women and Economics (1898) — Einführung, einige Ausgaben212 Exemplare
Men Doing Feminism (1998) — Mitwirkender — 42 Exemplare
Masculinity Studies and Feminist Theory (2002) — Vorwort — 39 Exemplare
Feminism and Masculinities (2004) — Mitwirkender — 8 Exemplare

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Geburtstag
20th Century
Geschlecht
male
Nationalität
USA

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It's weird to read this book now, after four years of a Donald Trump presidency, but it remains as relevant now as it was then. Donald Trump isn't mentioned at all this book, but he is the elephant in the room throughout. Kimmel, a sociologist, uses this book to explore who a "angry white man" is, what feeds into their sense of grievance and the dynamics of power in American politics. The author also points out that these men exist at an "end of an era", pointing to massive shifts in both economic forces and personal relationships that make it nearly impossible to truly turn back the clock.… (mehr)
 
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wagner.sarah35 | 4 weitere Rezensionen | Jul 7, 2023 |
This particular book is a precursor to some which I have recently reviewed, in particular, it laid the groundwork for Kay Hymowitz’s “Manning Up,” and was also referenced in Whitmore’s “Why Boys Fail.” The book is prefaced with a poem harshly criticizing America’s “boys will be boys” attitude towards the irresponsible, reckless, violent, and even criminal ways that many boys express themselves throughout adolescence and carried over into early manhood. The author begins by looking at a number of college and post-collegiate young men, some hardworking and studious, some carefree and partiers and notes that most of the young men that he interviewed are educated or being educated, and come from middle to upper class families. He then describes the extended adolescence of these privileged young men, who have the luxury of no commitments, no pressing responsibilities: “Guyland is the world in which these young men live. It is both a stage of life, a liminal undefined time span between adolescence and adulthood that can often stretch for a decade or more, a place, or rather, a bunch of places where guys gather to be guys with each other, unhassled by the demands of parents, girlfriends, jobs, kids, and the other nuisances of adult life. In this topsy-turvy, Peter-Pan mindset, young men shirk the responsibilities of adulthood and remain fixated on the trappings of boyhood, while the boys they still are struggle heroically to prove that they are real men despite all evidence to the contrary” (4).

Kimmel examines the social, cultural, and economic changes which have created the opportunity for the emergence of Guyland, pointing to the commonly accepted life-stage events which lead to adulthood: leaving home, completing education, beginning a career, marriage, and parenthood (24), and how many, possibly most, twenty-somethings and even thirty-somethings have yet to attain a majority of these milestones. This has been noted across the board in terms of gender, race, and class, but Kimmel focuses on how this has contributed to the continued appeal of Guyland, citing the attitude of “What’s the rush?” He also looks at the “guy code,” asking dozens of men, “what does it mean to be a man?” then explores how this is expressed throughout high school, college, and young adulthood. He also looks at the trappings of Guyland — games, pornography, sex — as well as the women who venture in. Finally, Kimmel looks at what happens on the other side of Guyland, when guys finally grow up and become men, and the negative repercussions of it, as well as what can be done to help them deconstruct Guyland into a healthier, empowering experience.

Some of the stories that Kimmel uncovers when interviewing teens and young adults are horrifying, and he observes that normal, regular guys are capable of both committing terrible crimes, and, through the Guy Code, the culture of loyal, complicit silence, becoming conspirators with those who commit the crimes: “the bystanders may think that they withdraw their support — by turning away, leaving the scene, or just standing stoically by — but their silence reinforces the behaviors anyway” (67). He relates stories of sexual and physical abuse, of bullying and tormenting others because of their beliefs or sexual orientations, of men who use and abuse alcohol and drugs. He reiterates the fact that by accepting these behaviors and shrugging it off by saying “boys will be boys,” we as a society are equally to blame for not only the crimes, but the loss of these young men and their potential. As parents, educators, employers, by making excuses for these guys, he argues, we are only encouraging and prolonging their stay in Guyland. This really is an excellent study of early manhood in contemporary society, and is highly recommended for those interested in the subject.
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resoundingjoy | 5 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 1, 2021 |
¿Por qué están los hombres cabreados? Michael Kimmel, uno de los más prestigiosos sociólogos a nivel mundial en estudios sobre la masculinidad, se hizo esta pregunta en el año 2013. Para responder a ella, decidió pasar cientos de horas en compañía de estos Angry White Men: desde activistas por los derechos de los hombres, pasando por supremacistas blancos, estudiantes o, sencillamente, trabajadores de a pie. Lo que detectó fue toda una serie de cambios sísmicos de raíz económica, social, política y cultural, que ha dejado a muchos hombres, todavía anclados en una idea obsoleta de masculinidad, con una sensación de confusión, traición y finalmente ira. Fruto de sus análisis, el autor acuña la expresión «derechos agraviados» para referirse a la privación de unos beneficios que estos hombres —blancos— cabreados creen poseer por el mero hecho de ser.

En 2016, con la inesperada victoria de Donald Trump, este lúcido ensayo sobre la pérdida de privilegios masculinos cobró una renovada actualidad que, con el auge global de las derechas populistas, merece ser analizado con mayor calma y profundidad.

Esta es una edición revisada y actualizada en 2017 por su autor —incluyendo un prólogo adaptado a la era Trump—, que pone de manifiesto la relevancia del género para comprender las claves de un nuevo mundo por venir.
… (mehr)
 
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bibliotecayamaguchi | Jun 3, 2020 |

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