Affirmative Reaction

Affirmative Reaction

New Formations of White Masculinity

  • Author: Carroll, Hamilton; Pease, Donald E.
  • Publisher: Duke University Press
  • Serie: New Americanists
  • ISBN: 9780822349297
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780822393870
  • Place of publication:  Durham , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 2011
  • Month: January
  • Pages: 232
  • DDC: 305.800973
  • Language: English
Affirmative Reaction explores the cultural politics of heteronormative white masculine privilege in the United States. Through close readings of texts ranging from the popular television drama 24 to the Marvel Comics miniseries The Call of Duty, and from the reality show American Chopper to the movie Million Dollar Baby, Hamilton Carroll argues that the true privilege of white masculinity—and its defining strategy—is not to be unmarked, universal, or invisible, but to be mobile and mutable. He describes how, in response to the perceived erosions of privilege produced by post–civil rights era identity politics, white masculinity has come to rely on the very discourses of difference that unsettled its claims on the universal; it has redefined itself as a marginalized identity.

Throughout Affirmative Reaction, Carroll examines the kinds of difference white masculinity claims for itself as it attempts to hold onto or maintain majority privilege. Whether these are traditional sites of minority difference—such as Irishness, white trash, or domestic melodrama—or reworked sites of masculinist investment—including laboring bodies, public-sphere politics, and vigilantism—the outcome is the same: the foregrounding of white masculinity over and against women, people of color, and the non-heteronormative. By revealing the strategies through which white masculinity is produced as a formal difference, Carroll sheds new light on the ways that privilege is accrued and maintained.

  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Part I - 9-11/24-7 Affective Time and the War on Terror
    • 1. Jack Bauer’s Extraordinary Rendition: Neoliberal Melodrama and the Ethics of Torture
    • 2. Future Perfect: “Everyday Heroes” and the New Exceptionalism
  • Part II - Embodying Difference: Whiteness, Class, and the Postindustrial Subject
    • 3. Men’s Soaps: Automotive Television Programming and Contemporary Working-Class Masculinities
    • 4. “My Skin Is It Startin’ to Work to My Benefit Now?”: Eminem’s White Trash Aesthetic
  • Part III - Daddy’s Home: Family Melodrama and the Fictions of State
    • 5. The Fighting Irish: Ethnic Whiteness and Million Dollar Baby
    • 6. Romancing the Nation: Family Melodrama and the Sentimental Logics of Neoliberalism
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Index

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