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This book traces the effects of the feminist and civil rights movements in the construction of Hollywood action heroes. Starting in the late 1980s, action blockbusters regularly have featured masculine figures who choose love and community over the path of the stoic loner committed solely to duty. The American heroic quest of the past 25 years increasingly has involved a reclamation of home, creating a place for the Hero at the hearth, part of a more intimate community with less restrictive gender and racial boundaries.The author presents pieces of contemporary popular culture that create the complex mosaic of the present-day American heroic ideal. Hollywood popular films are examined that best represent the often painful shift from traditional heroic masculinity to a masculinity that is less "exceptional" and more vulnerable. There are also chapters on how issues of race and gender intersect with the new masculinity and on subgenres of 1990s films that also developed this postfeminist masculinity.
Elizabeth Abele is an associate professor at Nassau Community College in Mineola, New York, and is executive director of the Northeast Modern Language Association.
Table of ContentsPreface 1Introduction 5One. Love Hard: Die Hard and the Home Front Hero 31Two. Love Will Show the Way 55Three. Home Is Where the Action Is 81Four. Serving on Multiple Fronts: Action Women 105Five. Integrating the American Action Hero 133Six. Rebooting Action Legends 159Seven. Hamlet IX: Happily Ever After 184Eight. Living to Get It Right: Home Front Masculinity as the 21st-Century Ideal 207Notes 237Bibliography 251Index 257
“illustrated with a wealth of b&w film stills”—ProtoView.