Pixar's Boy Stories
Masculinity in a Postmodern Age- Authors:
- |
- Publisher:
- 2014
Summary
Since Toy Story, its first feature in 1995, Pixar Animation Studios has produced a string of commercial and critical successes including Monsters, Inc.; WALL-E; Finding Nemo; The Incredibles; Cars; and Up. In nearly all of these films, male characters are prominently featured, usually as protagonists. Despite obvious surface differences, these figures often follow similar narratives toward domestic fulfillment and civic engagement. However, these characters are also hypermasculine types whose paths lead to postmodern social roles more revelatory of the current “crisis” that sociologists and others have noted in boy culture.
In Pixar’s Boy Stories: Masculinity in a Postmodern Age, Shannon R. Wooden and Ken Gillam examine how boys become men and how men measure up in films produced by the animation giant. Offering counterintuitive readings of boy culture, this book describes how the films quietly but forcefully reiterate traditional masculine norms in terms of what they praise and what they condemn. Whether toys or ants, monsters or cars, Pixar’s males succeed or fail according to the “boy code,” the relentlessly policed gender standards rampant in American boyhood.
Structured thematically around major issues in contemporary boy culture, the book discusses conformity, hypermasculinity, socialhierarchies, disability, bullying, and an implicit critique of postmodern parenting. Unprecedented in its focus on Pixar and boys in its films, this book offers a valuable perspective to current conversations about gender and cinema. Providing a critical discourse about masculine roles in animated features, Pixar’s Boy Stories will be of interest to scholars of film, media, and gender studies and to parents.
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Bibliographic data
- Copyright year
- 2014
- ISBN-Print
- 978-1-4422-3358-4
- ISBN-Online
- 978-1-4422-3359-1
- Publisher
- Rowman & Littlefield, Lanham
- Language
- English
- Pages
- 157
- Product type
- Book Titles
Table of contents
- Contents No access
- Introduction No access
- 1 Postfeminist Nostalgia for Pre-Sputnik Cowboys No access Pages 1 - 30
- 2 Superior Bodies and Blue-Collar Brawn No access Pages 31 - 54
- 3 “I am speed” No access Pages 55 - 82
- 4 “Hey, double prizes!” No access Pages 83 - 98
- 5 Consumerist Conformity and the Ornamental Masculine Self No access Pages 99 - 122
- 6 “She don’t love you no more” No access Pages 123 - 144
- Bibliography No access Pages 145 - 150
- Index No access Pages 151 - 156
- About the Authors No access Pages 157 - 157





