Status Updates From Recreating Japanese Men (Vo...
Recreating Japanese Men (Volume 20) (Asia: Local Studies / Global Themes) by
Status Updates Showing 1-15 of 15
Vivian
is 22% done
Expresses the transition of views on masculinity from the Warring States instability to the Great Peace of Edo period. The change in violence was not just a samurai phenomenon, but also noted in the lifelong diary of a successful merchant.
— Oct 31, 2013 10:25AM
Add a comment
Vivian
is 14% done
Although warriors enjoyed shooting guns at targets and in recreational hunts, to have the gun associated with one’s profession risked a loss of status, something that was always a source of anxiety during the long Edo peace.
— Oct 31, 2013 09:44AM
Add a comment
Vivian
is 13% done
By rejecting the identification of shogun with weapons, they contested a masculinity that had defined manliness in warrior society.
— Oct 31, 2013 09:24AM
Add a comment
Vivian
is 10% done
--The umlaut fail in the author's name makes me sad :(
— Oct 30, 2013 01:00PM
Add a comment
Vivian
is 3% done
In addition, ours is a moment at which a number of analytical opposites—including sex/gender, human/cyborg, body/mind—seem to be more resistant to dichotomization than ever before in ways that challenge notions of hegemony and erode the iconic status of previously existing figures.
— Oct 30, 2013 10:54AM
Add a comment
Vivian
is starting
In contrast to a socially engaged masculinity, the modern boy of the interwar years sought individual fulfillment by getting in touch with his feminine side in a display of androgyny that horrified government officials and social critics.
— Oct 30, 2013 10:37AM
Add a comment
Vivian
is starting
Men in the past (that is, before modernity) conceived of masculinity primarily in terms of maturity while taking their manhood for granted. In other words, the history of masculinity before the late nineteenth century is primarily one of maturity envisioned, struggled for, fallen short of, or achieved.
— Oct 30, 2013 10:12AM
Add a comment
Vivian
is starting
Men in the past (that is, before modernity) conceived of masculinity primarily in terms of maturity while taking their manhood for granted. In other words, the history of masculinity before the late nineteenth century is primarily one of maturity envisioned, struggled for, fallen short of, or achieved.
— Oct 30, 2013 10:08AM
Add a comment



