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[Commlist] Call for Chapter Proposals: Communication, Cultural Contradictions and the Crises of Masculinity: From Man-Shaming to Men Flaming

Tue Sep 10 06:50:46 GMT 2024






  CALL FOR SUBMISSIONS: Chapter Proposals for/Communication, Cultural
  Contradictions and the Crises of Masculinity: From Man-Shaming to Men
  Flaming/

Christopher J Finlay,*(cfinlay /at/ lmu.edu)* <mailto:(cfinlay /at/ lmu.edu)>

_Book Overview_

/Communication, Cultural Contradictions and the Crises of Masculinity: From Man-Shaming to Men Flaming///(Christopher J. Finlay & Lawrence A. Wenner, Eds) aims to be a breakthrough volume of research that interrogates the tensions and dynamics of a communication landscape that is both expressive of the challenges of contemporary masculinity and readily critical of its toxicity and virulence. The decline, changing roles, and dysfunctional unmooring of men in diverse spheres of life—from school to the workplace to marriage and family—have driven worrisome rises in male alienation, addiction, and deaths of despair which collectively have had broad and lasting consequences across the social fabric. This volume builds on key work, such as Richard Reeves’/Of Boys and Men/and the research of others who have documented how boys and men have fallen behind girls and women in education and the professional workplace and who are increasingly alienated in their personal lives, to explore the communicative contexts and practices that shape how men express their frustrations with changing gender relations, how they seek purpose in light of women’s success and power, and how they generate community in response to changing gender norms.

Contributors to this volume will critically consider the communication of man-shaming and recontextualize what lies behind men flaming in response. In interrogating communication’s role in the contemporary climate for men and boys, research in this volume seeks to move beyond systematic “shaming” work in critical feminist and men’s studies. With much focus on "toxic" masculinity and the culture of anger and viral aggrievement, this work has at times been uncritically overgeneralized as heterosexual, conservative and white. We look for new work in this volume to move towards a more empathetic critical-cultural understanding of the challenges that increasingly unmoored boys and men have been facing and how they have communicated and sometimes lashed out/or///“flamed” in response.

This effort is framed by an opening chapter by the editors which situates the diverse crises of masculinity, considers their demographic contexts (including class, race, sexuality, age, and geographic region) and communicative contexts (including education, the workplace, the family, politics, and media) and poses the need to move beyond the “blame and shame” culture underlying broad brushstroke assessments of male toxicity to engage tactics of compassion and empathy embraced in feminist care ethics in ways that can be more broadly beneficial. Contributor chapters that follow fall into two sections to consider communicative articulations of “man-shaming” and “men-flaming.” Here, using diverse communicative perspectives, contributors “lift the hood” to more fully contextualize and interrogate communication that has, on one hand, systematically sought to “shame men” and, on the other, colors the way “men flame” in frustrated response to undefined and evolving cultural conditions in ways that are often dismissed only as toxic and viral aggrievement.

_Call for Chapter Proposals_

The editors seek 300 word abstracts for 7000 word chapters featuring original research focused on two areas at the nexus of/Communication, Cultural Contradictions and the Crises of Masculinity/: (1) Man-Shaming and (2) Men Flaming. We seek submissions from scholars situated in interpersonal, group, organizational, and political communication, rhetoric, media, cultural studies, gender studies, and ancillary areas across the critical humanities and social sciences.

Chapters in the "man-shaming" section can feature analyses of a variety of man-shaming strategies, including critiques of how the concept of male toxicity informs responses in popular and political culture to changing conditions for men, critical examinations of how researchers and journalists approach the manosphere and other digital expressions of male angst and anger, and studies that interrogate endemic communication strategies in organizations and educational settings that can defacto serve to devalue racialized heteromasculinity, particularly as paired with whiteness. Analytic strategies in the man-shaming section should reach beyond simply noting toxicity or retreading familiar "pre-ordained" blame game strategies to more critically consider the complex and hybrid nature of men’s responses to their challenges in evolving and sometimes contradictory arrangements. As part of this, chapter authors should explain how their work facilitates understanding and could aid in developing future strategies that would be beneficial across gender identities.

Chapters in the "men flaming" section should consider men's own communication about the state of their affairs in a variety of settings, from manosphere digital spaces and alt right politics to workplace, military, recreational, and educational settings. We especially welcome chapters that seek to problematize popular constructions of “angry white men” through examining the phenomenon as it is expressed by diverse communities, including, but not limited to class, race, sexuality, age and geographic region.

Abstracts, along with an email address and a 100 word short biography for each author, should be sent by November 1, 2024 to*(christopher.finlay /at/ lmu.edu)* <mailto:(christopher.finlay /at/ lmu.edu)>and*(lawrence.wenner /at/ gmail.com)* <mailto:(lawrence.wenner /at/ gmail.com)>. Decisions on chapter acceptance will be communicated by November 15, 2024 with completed chapters due April 15, 2025.


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