This essay argues that recent male performances of disaster preparedness in reality television recuperate a preindustrial model of hegemonic masculinity by staging the plausible "real world" conditions under which manly skills appear necessary for collective survival. Representations of masculinity in uncertain times intensify the masculinity-in-crisis motif to cultivate anticipation of an apocalyptic event that promises a final resolution to male alienation. An examination of Nat Geo's Doomsday Preppers illustrates how these staged performances of everyday life cultivate a dangerous vision of apocalyptic manhood that consummates a fantasy of national virility in the demise of feminine society.
This essay contributes to and reframes the preliminary scholarly assessments of President Donald J. Trump's appeals to rage, malice, and revenge by sketching the rhetorical dimensions of an underlying emotional-moral framework in which victimization, resentment, and revenge are inverted civic virtues. I elaborate on the concept of ressentiment (re-sentiment), a condition in which a subject is addled by rage and envy yet remains impotent, subjugated and unable to act on or adequately express frustration. Though anger and resentment capture part of Trump's affective register, I suggest that ressentiment accounts for the unique intersection where powerful sentiments and self-serving morality are coupled with feelings of powerlessness and ruminations on past injuries. Thus, shifting focus from the rhetoric of resentment to that of ressentiment explains how Trump is able to sustain the affective charge of animus without forfeiting the moral high ground of victimhood to his audience's "oppressors"-Democrats, the press, criminals, immigrants, foreign adversaries, welfare recipients, the Me Too movement, "globalists," and racial Others.
The objectives of this study were to characterize and compare ovarian follicular populations in Gene Pool Control (GPC, randomly selected) and Relax Select line (RS, nine generations of selection for high ovulation rate followed by six generations of random selection) gilts during different stages of the estrous cycle. Thirty-five RS and 23 GPC gilts were allotted randomly within litter for ovary recovery on either d 3, 15 or 19 of the estrous cycle. Surface follicles on the ovaries were classified by size (small, less than 3 mm; medium, 3 to 6.9 mm; large, 7 to 12 mm), and counts were recorded for each ovary. Ovarian weight (OW), number of corpora lutea (CL), follicular fluid volume (FFV) from small, medium and large follicles, residual ovarian weight and follicular fluid weight (FFW) also were recorded. Total numbers of small and medium follicles were greatest on d 15, whereas total number of large follicles and FFW were greatest on d 19. The OW, FFW and follicle numbers of all classes were lowest on d 3. The RS gilts expressed longer interestrous intervals (21.9 vs 20.4 d, P less than .05) and higher ovulation rates (18.5 vs 15.3 CL, P less than .01) than GPC gilts. The left ovary of RS gilts was responsible for most of the ovulation rate advantage (10.3 vs 7.4 CL, P less than .01) Overall, GPC gilts had more total small follicles than RS gilts (P less than .01). The advantage was due primarily to higher numbers of small follicles at d 15.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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