Chapters 5 and 6 critically examine backlash men's movements, especially fathers’ rights groups and the politics of fatherhood. Both chapters are based on in-depth, qualitative analysis of interviews with members of (Real) Fathers 4 Justice. Chapter 5 explores two of three masculinities identified: “bourgeois-rational”, and “new man/new father” masculinity. These map on to specific constructions of fatherhood: “the good enough father”, and the “nurturing father” respectively, which are also explored. “Progressive” notions of crisis were associated with new man/new father masculinity, which advances a vision of kinder masculinity (without fundamentally unsettling gender binaries). Finally, the presence of feminist and postfeminist understand...
The aim of this study was to examine how men who have perpetrated violence toward their partners and...
This article examines fatherhood as a contemporary sociological phenomenon. Drawing on interviews wi...
This thesis engages with what has become a ubiquitous term in masculinity studies: “crisis”. I argu...
This book makes a unique contribution to contemporary research into masculinities, men’s movements, ...
Fathers’ rights groups have been characterised by some feminist academics as part of an anti-feminis...
Conceptualising ‘backlash’ and ‘postfeminism’ is important to understanding the gender politics of m...
The study investigates men's responses to contemporary sociocultural transformations in masculinity ...
Constructions of fatherhood are key signifiers of masculinity/ies and, in the context of a new polit...
Today’s fathers are more involved with childcare than the generations that preceded them. There is e...
Two models of fatherhood dominate academic discussions, an older more traditional form and a newer m...
In this article, we explore Swedish men’s relations to fatherhood in general and in par-ticular to t...
In this article, we explore Swedish men’s relations to fatherhood in general and in par-ticular to t...
SUMMARY. The emergence of fathers ’ rights groups, predominantly composed of men who have been perso...
This thesis consists of a study whereby five imprisoned men were interviewed regarding their perspec...
This project intends to explore the changing roles of men and fathers in a global context. It also ...
The aim of this study was to examine how men who have perpetrated violence toward their partners and...
This article examines fatherhood as a contemporary sociological phenomenon. Drawing on interviews wi...
This thesis engages with what has become a ubiquitous term in masculinity studies: “crisis”. I argu...
This book makes a unique contribution to contemporary research into masculinities, men’s movements, ...
Fathers’ rights groups have been characterised by some feminist academics as part of an anti-feminis...
Conceptualising ‘backlash’ and ‘postfeminism’ is important to understanding the gender politics of m...
The study investigates men's responses to contemporary sociocultural transformations in masculinity ...
Constructions of fatherhood are key signifiers of masculinity/ies and, in the context of a new polit...
Today’s fathers are more involved with childcare than the generations that preceded them. There is e...
Two models of fatherhood dominate academic discussions, an older more traditional form and a newer m...
In this article, we explore Swedish men’s relations to fatherhood in general and in par-ticular to t...
In this article, we explore Swedish men’s relations to fatherhood in general and in par-ticular to t...
SUMMARY. The emergence of fathers ’ rights groups, predominantly composed of men who have been perso...
This thesis consists of a study whereby five imprisoned men were interviewed regarding their perspec...
This project intends to explore the changing roles of men and fathers in a global context. It also ...
The aim of this study was to examine how men who have perpetrated violence toward their partners and...
This article examines fatherhood as a contemporary sociological phenomenon. Drawing on interviews wi...
This thesis engages with what has become a ubiquitous term in masculinity studies: “crisis”. I argu...