1st Edition

Contemporary Irish Masculinities Male Homosociality in Sally Rooney's Novels

By Angelos Bollas Copyright 2024
78 Pages
by Routledge

78 Pages
by Routledge

78 Pages
by Routledge

By examining portrayals of male homosociality in Sally Rooney's novels, the book documents how male relationships are formed, challenged, and often disavowed and the profound negative effects this can have for the wellbeing of men. The book also highlights the importance of the sociocultural context within which male relationships are formed and supports that the potential for healthy and... Read more

Introduction, Chapter 1. Impossible Male Homosociality, Chapter 2. Male Homosociality in the (Un)Making, Chapter 3. Antagonistic and Affectionate-but-Invisible Male Homosociality, Chapter 4. Making Male Homosociality Possible?, Conclusion

Biography

Dr Angelos Bollas is Assistant Professor in the School of Communications at Dublin City University. His research focuses on masculinity and sexuality studies. He writes about cultural representations of masculinities in television and literature, expressions of masculinities which challenge normative understandings of gender and sexuality, as well as pedagogical considerations around inclusion and diversity.

Bollas’ latest book should be considered a valuable contribution to the field of both Irish literary studies as well as the wider area of masculinity studies.Bollas provides a fruitful lens through which to re-read Rooney’snovels in order to re-conceptualise the relationships between men in contemporary Irish society, and to leave behind heteropatriarchal ideas of masculinity that have long prevailed in past and present Ireland. Bollas’ analysis not only challenges heteropatriarchal homosociality but calls for the liberation of male-to-maleinteractions to achieve homosocial relationships that are not only unrestricted but alsomeaningful and restorative.

Bollas provides a lot of sociological research to link the observations made in his literary analyses to current evaluations of masculinity formation and homosocial bonding. Another significant merit of the book in this context is the integration of additional sociological accounts of specifically Irish constructions of masculinity, and of digital homosociality. Undeniably, the book thrives on the intricate interweaving of sociology and literary analysis, drawing much of its quality from the extensive and meticulous close-readings.

--Dilâra Yilmaz, Kiel University, Germany