Aging Masculinities in Contemporary U.S. Fiction
| Collectivité auteur: | |
|---|---|
| Autres auteurs: | |
| Résumé: | XII, 192 p. text |
| Langue: | anglais |
| Publié: |
Cham :
Springer International Publishing : Imprint: Palgrave Macmillan,
2021.
|
| Édition: | 1st ed. 2021. |
| Collection: | Global Masculinities,
|
| Sujets: | |
| Accès en ligne: | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-71596-0 |
| Format: | Électronique Livre |
Table des matières:
- Chapter 1. Josep M. Armengol: No Country for Old Men? An Introduction
- Part I. GENDERING AGE
- Chapter 2. Juan González-Echeverría: Harvest Time for John Updike’s Rabbit: Sex Dies Harder than Gender
- Chapter 3. Sarah Hardy: Geographies of Aging in Jhumpa Lahiri’s “The Third and Final Continent” and Jeffrey Eugenides’ Middlesex
- Chapter 4. Teresa Requena: Literary Representations of Aging Masculinities: Bodies and Privilege
- Part II. MEN’S AGING IN POPULAR FICTION
- Chapter 5. M. Isabel Santaulària I Capdevila: “You are all too old to do anything but get yourselves killed:” Age and Masculinity in Stephen King’s It, Dreamcatcher and Doctor Sleep
- Chapter 6. Ángel Mateos-Aparicio: ‘‘To Oldie Go”: From James T. Kirk and Jean-Luc Picard to Samuel Lord and the Reconstruction of the Aging Male Body in the Final Frontier
- Part III. OLDER MEN IN AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND MEMOIR
- Chapter 7. Esther Zaplana: Self-Representation ‘Between Two’: Ageing Males, and the ‘Otherness within’ in Philip Roth’s Patrimony
- Chapter 8. Leonor Acosta-Bustamante: Reconstructing the (Masculine) Self from Old Age: Memories of the Aching Male Body in Paul Auster’s Winter Journal
- Part IV. AGING BEYOND WHITENESS
- Chapter 9. Mar Gallego: Black Masculinities and Aging in Toni Morrison’s Novels
- Chapter 10. Marta Bosch-Vilarrubias: Aging Men in Contemporary Arab American Literature Written by Women
- Part V. QUEERING AGE
- Chapter 11. Josep M. Armengol: Sex and Text: Queering Older Men’s Sexuality in Contemporary U.S. Fiction
- Chapter 12. Ignacio Ramos-Gay & Claudia Alonso-Recarte: On Long-lasting ‘Humanimal’ Companionships: Gayness, Aging and Disease in Steven Rowley’s Lily and the Octopus.