From television shows to the manosphere and from alt-right communities to fatherhood forums debates about masculinity have come to dominate the media landscape. What does it mean to be a man in contemporary society? How is masculinity constituted in different media spaces? This growing cultural tension around masculinities has been discussed and analyzed both for general audiences and in burgeoning academic scholarship. What has been typically overlooked, however, is the role that language plays in reifying these mediated performances of masculinity. Drawing on data from newspapers, social media sites, television programs, and online forums, this book explores language and masculinities across a range of media contexts, offering a critical evaluation of the intersection between language, masculinities, and identities in contemporary society. Against a cultural backdrop of rising neoliberalism, ethnic nationalism, online radicalization, networked misogyny, and fractious gender relations, this book furthers our understanding of how language is implicated in (re)creating gender ideologies, how language shapes contemporary gender relations, and the different ways men use language to monitor, evaluate, and police gender identities in online and offline spaces.