Description
This book brings together the emerging insights of what posthumanism, new materialism and affect theory mean for ‘the man question’. The contributors to this book interrogate the question of how ‘Man’ as a gendered being is entangled with nature, culture, materiality and corporeality, and they explore ways to unsettle men’s sense of sovereignty to decentre anthropocentric masculinity.
Men have to move from the centre of privilege which grants them supremacy before they can open themselves to the decentred, embodied, affective, vulnerable and relational self that is necessary to embrace the posthuman. This book explores the extent to which this is possible.
The book will be of interest to academics, students and scholars across a range of disciplines who are engaging with the intersections of feminist studies with posthumanism and new materialism, especially as they relate to critical studies of men and masculinities. Chapters on fathering, pornography, ageing, affect, embodiment, entanglements with technology and nature and the implications of these issues for changing men and masculinities and the politics of critical masculinity studies’ engagement with posthuman feminisms will interest students and academics across these diverse disciplines.
Table of Contents
1. Introduction: Posthumanism and the Man Question
Bob Pease and Ulf Mellström
Part I
Masculinities and Affect: Transgressing the Gendered Emotion Regime
2. The Affective Appeal of Nature for Masculinist Movements
Sam de Boise
3. Masculinities Taking Shape: Affect, Posthumanism, Forms
Terrance H. McDonald
4. Around and Around: Affective Masculinity in Circulation
Todd W. Reeser
5. Unsettling Masculinities Through Affect: Philip Roth’s Everyman and The Nemesis of Old Age
Esther Zaplana
Part II
Anthropocentric Masculinities and Entanglements with Bodies, Nature and Technology
6. Boys’ Brains on Porn: Affect, Addiction and Cerebral Subjectivity
Lucas Gottzén
7. "Confront[ing] the Suspicion" and "Embodied Embedded": New Materialism, Relational Ontologies, and Fathering Bodies
Andrea Doucet
8. Challenging Patriarchal, Colonial Patronage in Anthropocentric Engagements with ‘Nature Conservation’: Narratives of White Male Game Rangers in Southern Africa
Tamara Shefer, Ida Sabelis and Harry Wels
9. Emancipation, Connections and Vulnerabilities Among Bodaboda Men in Kampala: New Materialist Perspectives on the Effects of Infrastructural Limits
Caroline Wamala-Larsson and Jennie Olofsson
10. Destabilising Male Privilege: Explorations of the Posthuman in Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein (1818) and Jeannette Winterson’s Frankisstein (2019)
Teresa Requena-Pelegrí and Gemma López-Sanchez
Part III
Conversations Between Critical Studies of Men and Masculinities and Feminist Engagements with Posthumanism
11. Embrace or Engagement:? Critical Studies of Men and Masculinities and Feminist Posthumanism/New Materialism
Chris Beasley
12. Materialism, New Materialisms and Critical Studies of Men and Masculinities: Looking Back and Looking Forward, Relationally
Jeff Hearn
13. Are Posthumanism and Relational Ontologies Necessarily Emancipatory for Masculinity Studies?
Ulf Mellström
Part IV
Posthuman and New Materialist Ontologies of Becoming for Men
14. Towards Non-Sovereign Masculinities: Complexity, Nature, and New Materialisms
Steve Garlick
15. Under Construction: Masculinities as a Continuous Process of Assembly and Renovation
Ryan Coulling
16. Postgender Ecological Futures: From Ecological Feminisms and Ecological Masculinities to Queered Posthuman Subjectivities
Paul M. Pulé and Asmae Ourkiya
17. Men Becoming Otherwise: Lines of Flight from ‘Man’ and Majoritarian Masculinity
Bob Pease
Afterword
Greta Gaard



