For the love of men A new vision for mindful masculinity

Liz Plank

Book - 2019

An award-winning Vox.com correspondent links societal enforcement of traditional masculinity to current crime rates, outlining actionable steps based on today's rapidly evolving world to promote understanding and healthier responses in men who have been raised with toxic belief systems. --Publisher.

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2nd Floor 305.31/Plank Due May 11, 2024
Subjects
Published
New York : St. Martin's Press 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Liz Plank (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
ix, 325 pages ; 25 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-320).
ISBN
9781250196248
  • Author's Note
  • Introduction
  • Amuse-bouche: Thomas's Story
  • Part I. The Lies We Tell About Men
  • The Problem that Had No Name
  • Amuse-bouche: But First, a Quick Crash Course in Gender
  • 1. You're Not Born a Man
  • 2. Manhood Is Never Fully Earned and Needs to Be Renewed Over and Over Again
  • 3. Masculinity Is Under Attack
  • 4. Men Are Slaves to Their Bodies and Their Nether Regions
  • 5. Men Don't Need Intimacy
  • 6. Male Shame: What Is It Like to Feel Like You Need to Prove Something You Never Quite Feel Like You Have?
  • Amuse-bouche: Victor's Story
  • Part II. I Love Men
  • 7. The Great Suppression
  • Amuse-bouche: Wade's Story
  • 8. Bromance
  • Amuse-bouche: Glen's Story
  • 9. Waffles Are His Love Language
  • Amuse-bouche: Mau's Story
  • 10. The Mancession
  • Amuse-Bouche: The Post-#MeToo Rules
  • 11. If Patriarchy Is So Great, Why Is It Making You Die?
  • Amuse-bouche: Nico's Story
  • 12. The Making of Men
  • 13. Compassion As the Antidote to Hate
  • Amuse-bouche: D'Arcee's Story
  • Conclusion: The Case for Mindful Masculinity
  • Notes
  • Bibliography
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In this compassionate and skillful social analysis, journalist Plank's first book, she highlights the perils of an unfinished gender revolution that has failed to offer healthy alternatives to archaic expectations for men. She explains that patriarchal norms feed directly into a mental and physical health crisis for men. The shame experienced by men who don't feel they can embody the dominant, stoic provider archetype creates unaddressed depression and high male suicide rates, and internalized pressure not to ask for help leads men to avoid seeking needed health care. "Moral masculinity panic," meanwhile, traps men in outdated, pseudoscientific, and possibly self-fulfilling ideas about testosterone and violence, and limits their movement into caring professions where jobs are on the rise. As well, she writes, men romantically interested in women are stuck between the cultural norm of male emotion suppression and potential romantic partners' expectations of more emotional fluency. Plank intersperses brief profiles of individual men, which allow for exploration of some intersections of race, sexual orientation, and disability with norms of toxic masculinity. Plank's thoughtful approach and ability to elicit emotional responses from men by engaging them about masculinity as a curious, compassionate outsider yield a well-rounded picture of what contemporary men are facing. Agent: Eve Attermann, William Morris Endeavor. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Toxic masculinity has become a serious topic of conversation in recent years, and veteran journalist Plank has written a sensitive and sympathetic portrayal of the consequences of phrases such as "be a man" and "boys will be boys." Plank points out that men are largely hurting themselves by participating in one of the most common aspects of toxic masculinity, suppressing emotions, and notes the health and economic consequences of doing so. The central chapter, "If Patriarchy Is So Great, Why Is It Making You Die?" gets to the heart of Plank's project. The title reveals her thesis, confirmed by this chapter, as she is interested in the well-being of men. Readers should note this is not an attack on men; rather, the author deeply cares and illuminates stories about men navigating their way. Her goal is to encourage men to be compassionate with one another and possess the core values of a gender system that's shifting from an emphasis on being a "real man" to being a "good man." VERDICT This heartfelt, recommended book will find a welcome place for general readers interested in a clearly argued analysis of the current gender environment.--David Azzolina, Univ. of Pennsylvania Libs., Philadelphia

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Journalist and video blogger Plank's spirited first book addresses the problems men face in trying to live up to outmoded concepts of masculinity.While the author considers in passing the effects of what she calls "toxic masculinity" on women who often experience its unfortunate side effects, her main emphasis is on the men whose lives it damages. Writing in staccato bursts and frequently citing experts she has interviewed as well as written sources, Plank makes the case that what we consider masculine traits are socially determined rather than innate and that men at this point in time may be more limited by gender expectations than women are. "We updated what it means to be a woman, but we didn't update what it meant to be a man," she writes. For example, she suggests, women are beginning to feel free to express anger, while men are less apt to express fear or sadness. Women can comfortably wear the kind of clothing traditionally reserved for men, while men don't have the luxury of wearing women's clothing without comment. At the heart of the male dilemma, writes the author, is the "male shame spiral" in which men feel guilty about not being able to live up to the traditional macho ideal and then feel increasingly ashamed because they have to hide their feelings. Plank intersperses her longer chapters with short sections she labels "amuse-bouche," most of which introduce men who are defying conventional definitions of masculinity. At times, she can be glib and given to metaphors that try to be folksy. "Freedom is like pancakes at IHOP: you can't run out," she writes. While persuading the target male audience to read the book may be a challenge, those who take the leap will find plenty to think about.A canny appeal to the self-interest of men in reforming gender roles. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.