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OverviewFrom headlines to street corners, the message resounds: Black men are in crisis. Politicians, preachers, and pundits routinely cast blame on those already ostracized within African American communities. But the crisis of black masculinity does not rest with at-risk youth of the hip-hop generation or men on the down low alone. In this provocative new book, acclaimed cultural critic Mark Anthony Neal argues that the Strong Black Man -an ideal championed by generations of African American civic leaders-may be at the heart of problems facing black men today. New Black Man puts forth a revolutionary model of black masculinity for the twenty-first century-one that moves beyond patriarchy to embrace feminism and combat homophobia. Neal begins by tracing the origins of the Strong Black Man, an empowering figure called forth by Frederick Douglass and W.E.B. Du Bois at a time when black men were resisting enslavement, economic exploitation, and violence. Despite the good intentions of its creation, he argues, this rigid model has been used too often as justification for the oppression and mistreatment of black women and children. Neal urges us to imagine instead a New Black Man whose strength resides in family, community, and diversity. Part memoir, part manifesto, this book celebrates the black man of our times in all his vibrancy and virility. This impassioned tribute to a new face on the horizon of black America is not to be missed. AUTHORBIO: Mark Anthony Neal is Associate Professor of Black Popular Culture in the Program in African and African-American Studies at Duke University. He is author of What the Music Said, Soul Babies, and Songs in the Key of Black Life, and co-editor of That's the Joint: The Hip-Hop Studies Reader, all published by Routledge. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Mark Anthony NealPublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Dimensions: Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 22.90cm Weight: 0.466kg ISBN: 9780415971096ISBN 10: 0415971098 Pages: 208 Publication Date: 03 June 2005 Audience: General/trade , College/higher education , General , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Out of Print Availability: Out of stock Table of ContentsTable of Contents; Preface; Acknowledgments; Introduction: Walking Like a Natural Man ; 1. There's a New Black Man in America Today; 2. What the Hell is a Black Male Feminist; 3. Queers in a Barrel; 4. Bringing Up Daddy: A Black Feminist Fatherhood; 5. Ms. Fat Booty and the Black Male Feminist; AfterwordReviewsOne of the most brilliant cultural critics of his generation...Neal writes gracefully, thinks sharply, speaks cogently and is old school and new school at once. He's my favorite cultural critic and one hip brother.. <br>-Michael Eric Dyson, Chicago Sun-Times <br> You won't find many scholars with Neal's deep and abiding knowledge of contemporary black popular culture, and you won't find any able to throw down such head-noddin' prose.. <br>-Robin D. G. Kelley, Columbia University <br> Mark Anthony Neal's critique of old modes of discussing black masculinity is eloquent. Indeed, his analysis of the 'the strong black man' and the risks that idea poses to black liberation is long overdue. Engaging, thoughtful, and soulful, this important book is part cultural criticism and part blueprint for a new version of black masculinity (without homophobia and misogyny). I, for one, welcome the arrival onto the scene of the 'new black man'. <br>-Dwight A. McBride <br> You need oxygen to breathe more than the fetid air of homophobia, misogyny, antiblack racism in the empire and its possessions. Read Mark Anthony Neal's New Black Man. Here, Neal redefines the 'burden' and expands the struggle for a society free of denigration and violence. <br>-Joy James <br> Mark Anthony Neal has always been a daring scholar, but in this work he does pirouettes on a razor's edge, deliberately and deftly defying the keepers of the weary worn 'race man' trope and all its essentialist trappings. <br>-E. Patrick Johnson <br> One of the most brilliant cultural critics of his generation...Neal writes gracefully, thinks sharply, speaks cogently and is old school and new school at once. He's my favorite cultural critic and one hip brother.. -Michael Eric Dyson, Chicago Sun-Times You won't find many scholars with Neal's deep and abiding knowledge of contemporary black popular culture, and you won't find any able to throw down such head-noddin' prose.. -Robin D. G. Kelley, Columbia University Mark Anthony Neal's critique of old modes of discussing black masculinity is eloquent. Indeed, his analysis of the 'the strong black man' and the risks that idea poses to black liberation is long overdue. Engaging, thoughtful, and soulful, this important book is part cultural criticism and part blueprint for a new version of black masculinity (without homophobia and misogyny). I, for one, welcome the arrival onto the scene of the 'new black man'. -Dwight A. McBride You need oxygen to breathe more than the fetid air of homophobia, misogyny, antiblack racism in the empire and its possessions. Read Mark Anthony Neal's New Black Man. Here, Neal redefines the 'burden' and expands the struggle for a society free of denigration and violence. -Joy James Mark Anthony Neal has always been a daring scholar, but in this work he does pirouettes on a razor's edge, deliberately and deftly defying the keepers of the weary worn 'race man' trope and all its essentialist trappings. -E. Patrick Johnson One of the most brilliant cultural critics of his generation...Neal writes gracefully, thinks sharply, speaks cogently and is old school and new school at once. He's my favorite cultural critic and one hip brother.. -Michael Eric Dyson, Chicago Sun-Times You won't find many scholars with Neal's deep and abiding knowledge of contemporary black popular culture, and you won't find any able to throw down such head-noddin' prose.. -Robin D. G. Kelley, Columbia University Mark Anthony Neal's critique of old modes of discussing black masculinity is eloquent. Indeed, his analysis of the 'the strong black man' and the risks that idea poses to black liberation is long overdue. Engaging, thoughtful, and soulful, this important book is part cultural criticism and part blueprint for a new version of black masculinity (without homophobia and misogyny). I, for one, welcome the arrival onto the scene of the 'new black man'. -Dwight A. McBride You need oxygen to breathe more than the fetid air of homophobia, misogyny, antiblack racism in the empire and its possessions. Read Mark Anthony Neal's New Black Man. Here, Neal redefines the 'burden' and expands the struggle for a society free of denigration and violence. -Joy James Mark Anthony Neal has always been a daring scholar, but in this work he does pirouettes on a razor's edge, deliberately and deftly defying the keepers of the weary worn 'race man' trope and all its essentialist trappings. -E. Patrick Johnson Author InformationMark Anthony Neal is Associate Professor of Black Popular Culture in the Program in African and African-American Studies at Duke University. He is author of What the Music Said, Soul Babies, and Songs in the Key of Black Life, and co-editor of That's the Joint: The Hip-Hop Studies Reader, all published by Routledge. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |