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list price: $29.99
edition:eBook
also available: Hardcover Paperback
category: Social Science
published: Jun 2020
ISBN:9780774863759
publisher: UBC Press

He Thinks He's Down

White Appropriations of Black Masculinities in the Civil Rights Era

by Katharine Bausch

tagged: gender studies, african american studies, discrimination & race relations, civil war period (1850-1877)
Description

The end of the Second World War saw a “crisis of white masculinity” brought on by social, political, and economic change. He Thinks He’s Down explores the specific phenomenon of white men appropriating Black masculinities to benefit from what they believed were powerful Black masculinities. It reveals the intricate relationships between racialized gender identities, appropriation, and popular culture during the Civil Rights Era.

 

Drawing on case studies from three genres of popular culture –the literature of Mailer and Kerouac, fashion in Playboy magazine and action narratives in Blaxploitation films – Katharine Bausch untangles the ways in which white male artists took on imagined Black masculinities in their work in order to negotiate what it meant to be a man in America at this time. In so doing, Bausch argues, white men’s use of Black masculinities drained Black men of their political and racial agency and reduced them once more to little more than stereotypes.

About the Author

Katharine Bausch

Contributor Notes

Katharine Bausch is an award-winning instructor in the Pauline Jewett Institute of Gender and Women’s Studies at Carleton University in Ottawa. She has published several articles on the relationships between gender, race, sexuality, popular culture, and history, including on the subjects of appropriation, film, and Hip-Hop.

Editorial Review

Bausch asks important and intriguing questions regarding white masculinity and Black men in the postwar era.

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