Front cover image for Masculinities in Victorian painting

Masculinities in Victorian painting

This extensively illustrated study examines the construction of masculinity in culture based on an analysis of pictorial representations of the male in a wide range of contexts: social, historical, legal, literary, institutional, anthropological, educational, marital, imperial and aesthetic. Powerful images from the work of dozens of Victorian artists - from Leighton, Waterhouse, Burne-Jones and Alma-Tadema to Dicksee, Pettie, Watts, Woodville and Tuke to name a few - are used to illustrate the five key paradigms of masculinity: the classical hero, the gallant knight, the challenged paterfamilias, the valiant soldier and the male nude. Aspects of twentieth-century theory such as rescue compulsion, male sexuality, the male gaze and racial ideas are also considered. The author concludes that maleness was, and is, learned and that nineteenth-century ideas still influence the construction of manhood in the twentieth century; that social institutions are influenced by, and themselves use, artistic representation; that artistic images strongly influence ideas of gender; and that multidisciplinary cultural study is the best way to examine the formation of gender ideologies

Print Book, English, ©1995
Scolar Press ; Ashgate Pub., Aldershot, Hants, England, Brookfield, Vt., USA, ©1995