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Alternative constructions of masculinity in American literary naturalism

This project asserts that male Naturalist authors were not “hypermasculine” acolytes of
strident manhood, but instead offer alternative constructions which they portray as less traumatic
and more cohesive than prevailing social notions of normative male behavior. I maintain that the
rise of the concept of manhood advocated by Theodore Roosevelt in the early decades of the
twentieth century contributed to this misconception, for it generated a discourse of “manly”
individualism which became equated with socially acceptable performances of masculinity for
many Americans. My first chapter illustrates the gradual evolution of an individualistic, violent,
and strident concept of manhood, which I label “strenuous masculinity,” through the rhetoric of
Theodore Roosevelt. The second chapter explores the ways in which Stephen Crane’s fiction
illuminates the trauma and confusion inherent in strenuous concepts of manhood. Many of
Crane’s stories, like “Five White Mice,” demonstrate the failure of individualism, while others,
like “The Open Boat,” document a more positive construction of what I call “homosocial
manhood.” In my third and final chapter, I attempt to prove that Richard Wright’s early texts
showcase a range of possible outcomes of black male attempts to stand up to racial oppression.
I document that Uncle Tom’s Children and Native Son both depict a continuum of confrontation,
with individual violence on one end of the spectrum and non-violent group protest on the other.
Furthermore, because individual resistance is consistently equated with the suffering and death
of the protagonists, my project implies that strenuous manhood also fails to provide a site for
effectual and sustainable opposition to the negating forces of racial oppression. / Theodore Roosevelt and the transformation of American masculinity -- "The youth leaned heavily on his friend" : alternative constructions of masculinity in Stephen Crane's fiction -- Richard Wright's early fiction as a rejection of the racial oppression of strenuous manhood. / Department of English

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:BSU/oai:cardinalscholar.bsu.edu:123456789/194630
Date29 June 2011
CreatorsStryffeler, Ryan D.
ContributorsMcBride, Kecia Diver, 1966-
Source SetsBall State University
Detected LanguageEnglish

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