Attachments Essays on fatherhood and other performances

Lucas Mann

Book - 2024

"With Attachments, acclaimed nonfiction writer Lucas Mann turns his attention, tenderness, self-reflection and humor to contemporary fatherhood. In essays that resist categorization, he looks closely at all the joys, frustrations, subtleties and contradictions within an experience that often goes under-discussed. At once intimate and expansive, Mann chronicles his own life with his young daughter, but also looks outward to the cultural and political baggage that surrounds and permeates these every day experiences. Attachments examines climate anxiety, the helplessness and resentment of pandemic caregiving, the often toxic internalized legacy of masculinity, and the gender dynamics at play in any public or private act of fatherhood. Man...n traces his own cultural obsessions and curiosities, from Brad Pitt to Andy Warhol to superstar athlete fathers like LeBron James, to the men achieving semi-fame making dad jokes on Instagram. He probes the history of the way fatherhood has been depicted in books, movies and television, from Marilynne Robinson's Gilead to Cormac McCarthy to Karl Ove Knausgaard to Tony Soprano. Moving through memoir, lyric essay, literary analysis and pop culture criticism, Attachments treats the subject of fatherhood with the depth, curiosity and vivid emotion that it deserves"--

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
Iowa City : University of Iowa Press [2024]
Language
English
Main Author
Lucas Mann (author)
Physical Description
270 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781609389536
  • An Essay about Tiny, Spectacular Futures Written a Week or So after a Very Damning IPCC Climate Report
  • An Approximate Hourly Record of Thoughts and Feelings during a Time of Intense Sleep Deprivation
  • An Essay about Watching Brad Pitt Eat That Is Really about My Own Shit
  • On Boredom and Vigilance and Addiction and Other Everyday Occurrences
  • At the Playground
  • Attachments, Wild and Tame
  • Dads Being Dudes Making Jokes
  • An Inspirational Collective Reflection on Joy, Love, and Responsibility from Some Famous Fathers of Daughters, Both Real and Imagined
  • A Fan's Notes from the Domestic Future
  • Gratitude Is Just Math
  • On the Fantasies of Various Apocalypses
  • Summer Diary; or: After Andy Warhol
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Closely examined musings on contemporary fatherhood. In 12 loosely connected essays that collectively shape a kind of memoir, Mann, a professor of creative writing and author of Captive Audience, delves into his emotions as a father of a daughter throughout her first few years of life. The author capably navigates the intricacies of cultural expectations and archetypes, global concerns, and his personal history. In "Attachments, Wild and Tame," Mann poignantly explores the intersection of the natural world, childhood, and his daughter's burgeoning awareness, finding resonance with timeless children's literature from authors such as Beatrix Potter and Maurice Sendak. "An Essay about Watching Brad Pitt Eat That Is Really about My Own Shit" probes Mann's personal battles with weight gain and how he avoided projecting such anxieties onto his daughter. The narrative aligns with his perception of Brad Pitt as a paragon of physical perfection, exploring disingenuous on-screen moments when he's shown devouring fast food. While Mann's writerly style, rife with references and quotes from past and contemporary writers, may imply an audience of fellow writers, he consistently offers sublime reflections on the nuances of parent-child relationships. "What I'm trying to say is that the idea of father-as-model remains so seductive," he writes. "That a father's love is most powerfully expressed through pride--his pride for his kid, theirs for him, creating a template of a life worth living, then guiding them through it. The older my daughter gets, the faster time passes, which is both nice and terrifying. The days don't creep, they gallop along with tenderness and frustration, always a conversation….Sometimes, this is the furthest I've ever felt from restlessness, but then I think about how nothing has progressed, we've done nothing beyond pass the time together nicely." A heartfelt, perceptive, profoundly introspective journey into the realm of parenthood. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.