附註:Includes bibliographical references (pages 323-335) and index.
Filmography: pages 321-322.
The spy in the gray flannel suit -- The "paradox" of hegemonic masculinity -- Tough guys make the best psychopaths -- The body in the blockbuster -- The age of the chest -- Why boys are not men -- The bachelor in the bedroom -- Epilogue: Who was that masked man?
摘要:"When we think of the films of the 1950s, we inevitably remember the confident swagger of John Wayne, the suave sophistication of Cary Grant, and the emotional intensity of Marlon Brando. But today's culture critics see in the decade a period when heterosexual/homosexual dualism came to dominate the representation of American masculinity. Masked Men documents how movies of the 1950s represented masculinity as a multiple masquerade. Hollywood depicted the sexual anxieties of the domesticated breadwinner, the repudiation of wartime homoerotic male bonding, the exhibitionism of muscular bodies, the transvestic connotations of boyishness, and the playboy bachelor apartment. These presentations challenged the postwar ideal of the typical American male, that omnipresent and seemingly invisible Man in a Gray Flannel Suit."--Jacket.