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March 2021, Week 3

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Subject:
From:
Rachel Shand <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Film and TV Studies Discussion List <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Tue, 16 Mar 2021 15:32:25 +0000
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Dear screen-L Subscribers,

We would like to announce a new publication from Fordham University Press, which we hope will be of interest.

Kubrick’s Men
Richard Rambuss


https://www.combinedacademic.co.uk/9780823293889/kubricks-men/

Receive a 20% discount online*:
CSLS2021
*Valid until 11:59 GMT, 31st December 2021

“I devoured these pages. With Kubrick’s Men we discover a full and impressive display of Rambuss’s multidimensional and natural erudition. This masterful blend of the learned and the popular brings Kubrick’s male characters alive in novel, enlightening, and even dangerous ways. To read this work is to watch anew a master artist of the twentieth century.”—Anthony Swofford, author of Jarhead
“Kubrick’s Men is a bold, original, and richly textured study of one of the twentieth century’s most important and influential filmmakers. With astonishing detail, Rambuss traces Kubrick’s preoccupation with masculinities on the verge of coming undone.”—Robert J. Corber, author of Cold War Femme: Lesbianism, National Identity, and Hollywood Cinema
A provocative re-reading of Stanley Kubrick’s work and its focus on masculine desire
The work of Stanley Kubrick amounts to a sustained reflection on the male condition: past, present, and future. The persistent theme of his filmmaking is less violence or sex than it is the pressurized exertion of masculinity in unusual or extreme circumstances, where it may be taxed or exaggerated to various effects, tragic and comic—or metamorphosed, distorted, and even undone.
The stories that Kubrick’s movies tell range from global nuclear politics to the unpredictable sexual dynamics of a marriage; from a day in the life of a New York City prizefighter preparing for a nighttime bout to the evolution of humankind. These male melodramas center on sociality and asociality. They feature male doubles, pairs, and rivals. They explore the romance of men and their machines, and men as machines. They figure intensely conflicted forms of male sexual desire. And they are also very much about male manners, style, taste, and art.
Examining the formal, thematic, and theoretical affiliations between Kubrick’s three bodies of work—his photographs, his documentaries, and his feature films—Kubrick’s Men offers new vantages on to the question of gender and sexuality, including the first extended treatment of homosexuality in Kubrick’s male-oriented work.
Richard Rambuss is Nicholas Brown Professor of Oratory and Belles Lettres and chair of the Department of English at Brown University. He is the author of Closet Devotions and Spenser’s Secret Career and the editor of The English Poems of Richard Crashaw.
With all best wishes,

Combined Academic Publishers



Fordham University Press | March 2021 | 288pp | 9780823293889 | PB | £22.99*
*Price subject to change.










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