On Brokeback Mountain: Meditations about Masculinity, Fear, and Love in the Story and the FilmOn Brokeback Mountain: Meditations About Masculinity, Fear, and Love in the Story and the Film provides a close, detailed, comparative discussion of the short story and the film in relation to ways of understanding masculinity and love between men in American culture. It uses analytical ideas from gay and lesbian/queer studies, American studies, social history, film history, and literary history, but avoids specialized theoretical language in order to be accessible to the many people interested in the story and the film. Original, interdisciplinary, and engaging, On Brokeback Mountain is intended to be not only useful to academic specialists but also accessible and readable for any interested, educated reader. The two versions of Brokeback Mountain are significant for taking readers and audiences inside the perspectives of men who love men, showing what physical and emotional passion, and hostility toward that passion, may be like for them. The story and the film help in understanding the many men who love men and who don't fit stereotypes of gay men or participate in the gay/queer worlds of urban/academic communities, especially men in rural areas and in working class contexts. This book examines the presentation of friendship, sex, and love between men in Brokeback Mountain, as well as the depiction of homophobia and its effects on men who love men and their families. It relates the story and the film to the literary tradition of the homoerotic pastoral, the literary/movie tradition of the Western, and the tradition of the tragic romantic love story. |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 55
Page xiii
... forces men to hide and deny their most important relationships with other men . Both the story and the film depict the damage that can result for a man who loves men and for the others in his life when the threat of homophobia and the ...
... forces men to hide and deny their most important relationships with other men . Both the story and the film depict the damage that can result for a man who loves men and for the others in his life when the threat of homophobia and the ...
Page xiv
... forces with an intensity that may be equaled in some works of fiction , but that hasn't been seen before in a major Hollywood movie . Their depictions of homophobia also are highly perceptive concerning the forms it can take and the ...
... forces with an intensity that may be equaled in some works of fiction , but that hasn't been seen before in a major Hollywood movie . Their depictions of homophobia also are highly perceptive concerning the forms it can take and the ...
Page xx
... force everyone to conform to the dominant bi- nary system of heterosexual gender and sexual behavior , making many peo- ple struggle to repress desires , emotions , and behaviors that they may feel are appropriate for them . In relation ...
... force everyone to conform to the dominant bi- nary system of heterosexual gender and sexual behavior , making many peo- ple struggle to repress desires , emotions , and behaviors that they may feel are appropriate for them . In relation ...
Page xxx
... different in terms of gender and sexuality , it not only hurts them , but intimidates and silences those whose differences aren't readily apparent , and indeed forces all men and women XXX Introduction : About the Book.
... different in terms of gender and sexuality , it not only hurts them , but intimidates and silences those whose differences aren't readily apparent , and indeed forces all men and women XXX Introduction : About the Book.
Page xxxi
... forces all men and women into the confining re- strictions of traditional constructions of accepted sexuality and gender . Ho- mophobia works to silence or discredit those who might challenge the estab- lished order of gender and power ...
... forces all men and women into the confining re- strictions of traditional constructions of accepted sexuality and gender . Ho- mophobia works to silence or discredit those who might challenge the estab- lished order of gender and power ...
Contents
Reactions To Brokeback Mountain | xlv |
A Companion Where None Had Been Expected Friendship | 1 |
Guns Goin Off Sex | 41 |
The Rushing Cold of the Mountain Nature | 73 |
We Do That in the Wrong Place Well Be Dead Hatred and Fear | 135 |
Separate and Difficult Lives Love | 177 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
accept American culture Ang Lee Annie Proulx attraction Brokeback Mountain challenge characters constructed continue contrast cowboy depiction desire Diana Ossana discussion dominant Ennis and Alma Ennis and Jack Ennis's episode especially experience expression father fear feel film filmmakers friendship Gay and Lesbian Gyllenhaal hatred Heath Ledger heterosexual homoerotic homophobia homophobic homosexuality homosocial hostility ideal intense intimacy involved Jack and Ennis Jack's Jake Gyllenhaal July 29 landscape Leaves of Grass Ledger Lesbian lives look Lureen majority male love male-male man-loving marriage masculine members of sexual movie narrative Ossana particularly pass for straight pastoral physical poem presents Press queer ranch reject rodeo romantic love rural same-sex scene Screenplay screenwriters sense sexual and emotional sexual minorities sexual orientation sexuality and gender sexually different share shirts shows social society stereotypes story suggests summer there's tion traditional Transgender understand versions of Brokeback violence West Western Whitman who's women York