2008
DOI: 10.25071/1913-9632.24772
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"Hunkies," "Gasbags," & "Reds": The Construction and Deconstruction of Hegemonic Masculinity in Black Fury (1935) and Riff Raff (1936)

Abstract: Labour's struggle was an industrial war, with labour's forces led by manly proletarian generals against the effeminate bosses and childlike scabs. 24 And, despite the centrality of women workers to many of the labour struggles in the 1930s, "What is noticeably absent from these cartoons is any representation of the worker (and especially the union worker) as female." 25 At best, women were a d j u n c t s, a u x i l i a r i e s, o r, p e r h ap s, p roletarian mothers in need of p at r i a rchal pro t e c t i … Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…It is a method by which individuals learn about the world around them. Thus, irrespective of their intellectual depth or artistic merit (or lack thereof), films provide social commentary and teach viewers lessons about society (also see Cassano, 2008a;Denzin, 1995;Frymer et al, 2010;hooks 1996). The question I ask in this paper is how do Quicksilver and Premium Rush make use of a 'bad job' (ala Kalleberg et al, 2000) in constructing stories about work and class?…”
Section: Cinema and Critical Sociologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It is a method by which individuals learn about the world around them. Thus, irrespective of their intellectual depth or artistic merit (or lack thereof), films provide social commentary and teach viewers lessons about society (also see Cassano, 2008a;Denzin, 1995;Frymer et al, 2010;hooks 1996). The question I ask in this paper is how do Quicksilver and Premium Rush make use of a 'bad job' (ala Kalleberg et al, 2000) in constructing stories about work and class?…”
Section: Cinema and Critical Sociologymentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It implies that theorizing will always shape and be shaped by the psyche of the theorist. Graham Cassano (2009), in "'Hunkies,' 'Gasbags,' and 'Reds,'" uses this insight to great effect, showing how the 6. Hillman (1999, xxiv) claims the following: "My war-and I have yet to win a decisive battleis with the modes of thought and conditioned feelings that prevail in psychology and therefore also in the way we think and feel about our being.…”
Section: Riomentioning
confidence: 96%
“…From the first sound picture, The Jazz Singer (1928), analyzed so well by Michael Rogin (1998), to social problem films like Black Fury (1935), gangster pictures, especially Scarface (1932), to melodramas like Frank Borzage’s Mannequin (1938), second generation immigrants were portrayed as caught between old and new worlds. Some films, like Michael Curtiz’s Black Fury (1935) and Borzage’s Big City (1937), go much further, taking a stand for social justice by vividly portraying the racism and oppression experienced by immigrant workers (Cassano, 2008b, 2009b). While rarely exposed to the level of vicious racism experienced by African Americans, Asian Americans, and indigenous peoples, the racism, forms of exclusion, and racial domination these ‘new immigrants’ did experience within the normatively ‘white’ culture of the US shaped their assimilation and Americanization.…”
Section: ‘I Now Own You’: Immigrants and The Shadows Of Blacknessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While Romero’s motivations for pursuing Penny are never explicitly articulated, they parallel Lucky’s desire for the common world and, simultaneously, resemble the racial dialectic of desire played out in so much 1930s cinema. Racial and ethnic ‘others’ pursue white lovers precisely in order to gain access to that whiteness, to be allowed into the common world (Cassano, 2008b, 2009b). And whatever Romero’s motivations, one thing is clear: he stands below Lucky in the social hierarchy.…”
Section: ‘I Now Own You’: Immigrants and The Shadows Of Blacknessmentioning
confidence: 99%
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