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Men, Masculinities and Health: Critical Perspectives

Editat de M. Hall, Steve Robertson
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 oct 2009
Men drink too much alcohol, eat unhealthy food and avoid going to the doctors until they are seriously ill. Indeed, some say being masculine is bad for men's health. But is the situation so simple?This deeply engaging book explores both the psychological and sociological factors that affect men and their health. It investigates how notions of 'maleness' impact on the individual's approach to health and take-up of services, and provides clear foundations for best practice in care.Part 1 of the book explores and sets the theoretical scene. It asks why disparate fields have not previously been brought together and what theoretical frameworks could be utilised to assist in this process. Parts 2 and 3 consider empirical work in relation to men, health and illness, providing critical rather than simply descriptive accounts.Bringing together an international collection of contributors, Men, Masculinities and Health provides fresh ideas for practice; creating a fertile terrain for future debate that will excite all those interested in gender issues.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780230203112
ISBN-10: 0230203116
Pagini: 272
Ilustrații: 44 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 138 x 216 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.46 kg
Ediția:2009
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Red Globe Press
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Caracteristici

Draws together two previously disparate disciplines to provide an original insight into the psychological and sociological factors that affect men's health

Notă biografică

BRENDAN GOUGH is Professor of Applied Social Psychology at Nottingham Trent University, UK. He is a critical social psychologist and qualitative researcher interested in gender issues, especially concerning men and masculinities. He has publishedvarious papers on gender identities and relations which draw upon discursive and psychoanalytic concepts, including areas such as sexism, homophobia and intersex. He has also published papers on ESRC funded health-related research, such as alcohol consumption, smoking and aspects of men's health. He is co-editor of Qualitative Research& Psychology and Social Psychology& Personality Compass (the Critical Psychology Section).STEVE ROBERTSON is currently Reader in Men's Health at the Centre for Men's Health, Leeds Metropolitan University, UK. He worked as a nurse and health visitor for over 15 years before commencing a research career, completing his PhD at the Institute for Health Research, Lancaster University. He has been publishing in the men's health field, particularly in men's health promotion, for over 14 years and is author of Understanding Men and Health: Masculinities, Identity and Well-Being (2007). He is best known for his work linking theories of masculinities to concepts of health and illness and has collaborated on published work in this area with colleagues in Australia, Canada and the United States.

Cuprins

Foreword; K.Hunt Acknowledgments Notes on Contributors Introduction What is the Point of This Book?; B.Gough& S.Robertson PART I: CURRENT ISSUES AND DEBATES IN THE FIELD OF MEN'S HEALTH Developing a Critical Men's Health Debate in Academic Scholarship; M.Lohan A Grand Illusion: Masculinity, 'Passing' and Men's Health; D.Buchbinder Men, Public Health and Health Promotion: Towards a Critically Structural and Embodied Understanding; S.Robertson & R.Williams Bugging the Cone of Silence With Men's Health Interviews; J.L.Oliffe PART II: POPULAR CONCEPTIONS OF MEN'S HEALTH AND WELLBEING Men's Negotiations of a 'Legitimate' Self-help Group Identity; S.Seymour-Smith Older Men's Health: The Role of Marital Status and Masculinities; K.Davidson& R.Meadows Promoting 'Masculinity' Over Health: A Critical Analysis of Men's Health Promotion With Particular Reference to an Obesity Reduction 'Manual'; B.Gough The Health Experiences of African-Caribbean and White Working Class Fathers; R.Williams PART III: MEN, MASCULINITIES AND ILLNESS Pathologizing Fatherhood: The Case of Male Post Natal Depression in Britain; E.Lee Prostate Cancer and Masculinities in Australia; A.Broom Understanding Masculinities within the Context of Men, Body Image and Eating Disorders; M.Drummond The Role of Masculinities in White and South Asian Men's Help-seeking Behaviour for Cardiac Chest Pain; P.Galdas Afterword: What Next for Men's Health Research?; S.Robertson& B.Gough Index.