This Week's Suggested Book from the Ashbrook Center (Monday, July 24, 2000)
 | | What Is A Man?: 3,000 Years of Wisdom on the Art of Manly Virtue
by Waller R. Newell, ed. |
Regan Books 790 pages, January 2000 Hardcover, 30.00 ISBN: 0060392967
A percentage of the proceeds from your purchase of this book from Amazon.com will benefit the Ashbrook Center.
At a time when all of America is debating the wayward course of contemporary manhood, one thing has been missing from the
conversation: a source to which concerned readers might turn for guidance and inspiration, a path back to the wisdom of our shared
tradition of manly virtues.
Missing, that is, until now. In What Is A Man? historian and commentator Waller R. Newell collects three thousand years of the
finest and most thought-provoking writings on the subject of manhood. Introduced and placed in context by Newell's incisive and
illuminating commentary, each of the eight sections in this volume addresses one aspect of the shared traditions of manliness—from
wisdom to chivalry to nobility. From Aristotleon courage to Sir Thomas Malory on love, honor, and chastity; from Shakespeare on
leadership to John Cheever on adolescence; from Jane Austen on pride to Theodore Roosevelt on family life—each new voice
contributes perspective and authority to this maltifaceted exploration of virtue and masculinity. And the final section, “The Invisible
Man,” reflects the confusions of modern manhood, addressing issues of violence, media imagery, and the role of the counterculture
through commentators as diverse as James Dean, David Foster Wallace, and Kurt Cobain.
An anthology of extraordinary scope and depth, What Is A Man? reminds us all of the relevance of the manly tradition and offers a
blueprint for men (and women) eager to uphold the honor of our forefathers' legacy.
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