Críticas:
"Perceptive and engaging, Eberwein's examination of depictions of masculinity in war films goes beyond the commonplace in criticism that merely conflates friendship with homoeroticism - an important topic that will command significant interest." - Stephen Prince, author of Classical Film Violence: Designing and Regulating Brutality in Hollywood Cinema, 1930-1969"
Reseña del editor:
In war films, the portrayal of deep friendships between men is commonplace. Given the sexually anxious nature of the American imagination, such bonds are often interpreted as carrying a homoerotic subtext. In ""Armed Forces"", Robert Eberwein argues that an expanded conception of masculinity and sexuality is necessary in order to understand more fully the intricacy of these intense and emotional human relationships. Drawing on a range of examples from silent films such as ""What Price Glory"" and ""Wings"" to sound era works like ""The Deer Hunter"", ""Platoon"", ""Three Kings"", and ""Pearl Harbor"", he shows how close readings of war films, particularly in relation to their cultural contexts, demonstrate that depictions of heterosexual love, including those in romantic triangles, actually help to define and clarify the nonsexual nature of male love. The book also explores the problematic aspects of masculinity and sexuality when threatened by wounds, as in ""The Best Years of Our Lives"", and considers the complex and persistent analogy between weapons and the male body, as in ""Full Metal Jacket"" and ""Saving Private Ryan"".
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