Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://dx.doi.org/10.25595/1468
Author(s)
Axelsson, Bodil
Journal Title
Culture unbound : Journal of current cultural research
Year of publication
2012
Volume
4
Issue number
2
Page reference
275-295
Language
englisch
Abstract
This article explores how the low of the popular and the high of history intersect to negotiate masculinities in the nexus of politics and war in a Swedish history magazine. It investigates the content of the magazine’s form and argues that it produces a kaleidoscopic take on the past which begs the reader to go along with the ads to buy another book, travel to one more historical site, buy a DVD or go to the movies, to turn the page, or to buy another issue of the magazine. Two articles, biographical in their outset, provide the basis for an analysis on how masculinities are negotiated by displaying political and military leaders in contradictory ways and enabling multiple entrance points for the contemporary reader and spectator. Articles on great men produce cultural imaginaries of warlords and political leaders by drawing on layers of historically contingent ways for men to act in public and private spheres and connecting late modern visual celebrity culture to the cults of fame in earlier centuries.
Publication type
Zeitschriftenartikel
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