Masculinity and Patriarchal Villainy in the British Novel: From Hitler to Voldemort

Author:   Sara Martín
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
ISBN:  

9780367441463


Pages:   238
Publication Date:   05 December 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Masculinity and Patriarchal Villainy in the British Novel: From Hitler to Voldemort


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Author:   Sara Martín
Publisher:   Taylor & Francis Ltd
Imprint:   Routledge
Weight:   0.453kg
ISBN:  

9780367441463


ISBN 10:   0367441462
Pages:   238
Publication Date:   05 December 2019
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Tertiary & Higher Education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

Table of Contents

Introduction. Defining the Patriarchal Villain Chapter 1. Adolf Hitler: The Threat of Absolute Villainy Chapter 2. Big Brother and O’Brien: The Mystique of Power and the Reproduction of Patriarchal Masculinity Chapter 3. Morgoth and Sauron: The Problem of Recurring Villainy Chapter 4. Steerpike: Gormenghast’s Angry Young Man Chapter 5. Ernst Stavro Blofeld, Larger Than Life: The Villain in the James Bond Series Chapter 6. Richard Onslow Roper and the ‘Labyrinth of Monstrosities’: John le Carré’s Post-Cold War Villains Chapter 7. Michael Dobbs’s Francis Urquhart Trilogy: Democracy at Risk Chapter 8. Big Ger Cafferty, Crime Boss: The Constant Struggle to Retain Power Chapter 9. Voldemort and the Limits of Dark Magic: Self-empowerment as Self-destruction Conclusions

Reviews

This is a new and provocative rethinking of masculinity. In a bold and imaginative thesis, Martin argues that the villain is a function of patriarchy's systems of masculine entitlement, and their 'evil' is a form of rage against those who threaten it. With a range of stimulating readings in British fiction, this is a fascinating, original and highly readable study in 'anti-patriarchy studies'. --Dr Brian Baker, Senior Lecturer in English and Creative Writing, Lancaster University Sara Martin has written an enthralling and ground-breaking account of the long-forgotten literary figure of the villain from a contemporary perspective. Taking the paradigm of Hitler as a point of departure, she explores characters as wicked as they are obscurely fascinating, ranging from Big Brother to Voldemort. And in so doing she articulates and unveils the ambiguous mechanisms of our own psyche. This is enjoyable and profound scholarship at its best. --Dr. Antonio Ballesteros-Gonzalez, Professor of English Literature, UNED (Spain) In her new book, Martin makes a powerful and convincing case for the importance of villainy to Masculinity Studies. Written with great verve and real critical purpose, this wonderfully provocative piece of anti-patriarchal literary scholarship is a timely and valuable addition to the field. --Dr Xavier Aldana Reyes, Reader in English Literature and Film, Manchester Metropolitan University


"""This is a new and provocative rethinking of masculinity. In a bold and imaginative thesis, Martín argues that the villain is a function of patriarchy’s systems of masculine entitlement, and their ‘evil’ is a form of rage against those who threaten it. With a range of stimulating readings in British fiction, this is a fascinating, original and highly readable study in ‘anti-patriarchy studies’."" --Dr Brian Baker, Senior Lecturer in English and Creative Writing, Lancaster University ""Sara Martín has written an enthralling and ground-breaking account of the long-forgotten literary figure of the villain from a contemporary perspective. Taking the paradigm of Hitler as a point of departure, she explores characters as wicked as they are obscurely fascinating, ranging from Big Brother to Voldemort. And in so doing she articulates and unveils the ambiguous mechanisms of our own psyche. This is enjoyable and profound scholarship at its best."" --Dr. Antonio Ballesteros-González, Professor of English Literature, UNED (Spain) ""In her new book, Martín makes a powerful and convincing case for the importance of villainy to Masculinity Studies. Written with great verve and real critical purpose, this wonderfully provocative piece of anti-patriarchal literary scholarship is a timely and valuable addition to the field."" ¿ --Dr Xavier Aldana Reyes, Reader in English Literature and Film, Manchester Metropolitan University"


This is a new and provocative rethinking of masculinity. In a bold and imaginative thesis, Martin argues that the villain is a function of patriarchy's systems of masculine entitlement, and their 'evil' is a form of rage against those who threaten it. With a range of stimulating readings in British fiction, this is a fascinating, original and highly readable study in 'anti-patriarchy studies'. --Dr Brian Baker, Senior Lecturer in English and Creative Writing, Lancaster University Sara Martin has written an enthralling and ground-breaking account of the long-forgotten literary figure of the villain from a contemporary perspective. Taking the paradigm of Hitler as a point of departure, she explores characters as wicked as they are obscurely fascinating, ranging from Big Brother to Voldemort. And in so doing she articulates and unveils the ambiguous mechanisms of our own psyche. This is enjoyable and profound scholarship at its best. --Dr. Antonio Ballesteros-Gonzalez, Professor of English Literature, UNED (Spain) In her new book, Martin makes a powerful and convincing case for the importance of villainy to Masculinity Studies. Written with great verve and real critical purpose, this wonderfully provocative piece of anti-patriarchal literary scholarship is a timely and valuable addition to the field. ? --Dr Xavier Aldana Reyes, Reader in English Literature and Film, Manchester Metropolitan University


This is a new and provocative rethinking of masculinity. In a bold and imaginative thesis, Martin argues that the villain is a function of patriarchy's systems of masculine entitlement, and their 'evil' is a form of rage against those who threaten it. With a range of stimulating readings in British fiction, this is a fascinating, original and highly readable study in 'anti-patriarchy studies'. --Dr Brian Baker, Senior Lecturer in English and Creative Writing, Lancaster University Sara Martin has written an enthralling and ground-breaking account of the long-forgotten literary figure of the villain from a contemporary perspective. Taking the paradigm of Hitler as a point of departure, she explores characters as wicked as they are obscurely fascinating, ranging from Big Brother to Voldemort. And in so doing she articulates and unveils the ambiguous mechanisms of our own psyche. This is enjoyable and profound scholarship at its best. --Dr. Antonio Ballesteros-Gonzalez, Professor of English Literature, UNED (Spain) In her new book, Martin makes a powerful and convincing case for the importance of villainy to Masculinity Studies. Written with great verve and real critical purpose, this wonderfully provocative piece of anti-patriarchal literary scholarship is a timely and valuable addition to the field. --Dr Xavier Aldana Reyes, Reader in English Literature and Film, Manchester Metropolitan University


Author Information

Sara Martín is Senior Lecturer in English Literature and Cultural Studies at the Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona, Spain. Dr Martín specialises in Gender Studies, particularly Masculinities Studies, which she applies to the study of popular fictions in English, with an emphasis on science fiction and, secondarily, horror and fantasy. Among her books are Monstruos al Final del Milenio (2002), Expediente X: En Honor a la Verdad (2006), Recycling Cultures (ed., 2006), La Literatura (2008), Desafíos a la Heterosexualidad Obligatoria (2011) and Persistence and Resistance in English Studies (co-ed., 2018). She co-edited with Fernando Ángel Moreno a monographic issue on Spanish science fiction for Science Fiction Studies (2017). Dr Martín’s translations include Manuel de Pedrolo’s masterpiece of Catalan Literature Typescript of the Second Origin (2018).

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