Are We Not Men?: Masculine Anxiety and the Problem of African-American Identity

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Oxford University Press, 1996 - Literary Criticism - 254 pages
In 1995, popular anxieties about black masculinity became evident in public reactions to the conclusion of the OJ Simpson trial and the Million Man March on Washington. The nation's divided response to the OJ verdict, together with the controversy surrounding Louis Farrakhan's call to black men to come together for a "day of atonement", brought issues of race and gender to the forefront of national debate. In his timely and incisive book Are We Not Men? Phillip Brian Harper explores issues of race and representation and shows that ideas about black masculinity have always played a troubled role both in the formation of African-American identity and in the mass media at large. Using examples from a variety of cultural contests, ranging from sports and pop music to literature and television, Harper shows the ways in which narrow definitions of black manhood have failed to acknowledge real differences within the African-American community - to grave social and political effect.
 

Contents

Nationalism and Social Division
39
Whats My Name?? Designation Identification
54
The Street Popular Music
74
The Limits of Race and Social Regulation
101
Blackness
127
Negotiating Difference in AfricanAmerican Culture
151
AfricanAmerican Society
163
Laurie Anderson and the Racial Politics
177
Social Normativity
184
Epilogue
190
Notes
203
Works Cited
219
Index
239
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About the author (1996)

Phillip Brian Harper is Associate Professor of English at New York University. He is the author of Framing the Margins.