What accounts for the crisis of masculinity that afflicted middle and upper class men in the late nineteenth century?

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journal article

THE "CRISIS" of WHITE MASCULINITY

Counterpoints

Vol. 163, The Gender of Racial Politics and Violence in America: LYNCHING, PRISON RAPE, & THE CRISIS OF MASCULINITY (2001)

, pp. 321-416 (96 pages)

Published By: Peter Lang AG

https://www.jstor.org/stable/42977756

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Journal Information

Counterpoints publishes the most compelling and imaginative books being written in education today. Grounded on the theoretical advances in criticalism, feminism and postmodernism in the last two decades of the twentieth century, Counterpoints engages the meaning of these innovations in various forms of educational expression. Committed to the proposition that theoretical literature should be accessible to a variety of audiences, the series insists that its authors avoid esoteric and jargonistic languages that transform educational scholarship into an elite discourse for the initiated. Scholarly work matters only to the degree it affects consciousness and practice at multiple sites. Counterpoints editorial policy is based on these principles and the ability of scholars to break new ground, to open new conversations, to go where educators have never gone before.

Publisher Information

The Peter Lang Publishing Group has over 40 years of experience in academic publishing, specializing in the humanities and social sciences worldwide and publishing more than 1,800 titles every year. The headquarters in Bern, Switzerland are the central hub for executive management, sales, marketing and distribution services, working closely with the editorial companies based in Berlin, Bern, Brussels, Oxford, and New York, and supported by commissioning editors working out of local offices in Vienna, Dublin, Warsaw and Istanbul.

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Counterpoints © 2001 Peter Lang AG
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