Hard Bodies is about Ronald Reagan, Robert Bly, "America," Rambo, Dirty Harry, national identity, and individual manhood. By linking blockbuster Hollywood films of the 1980s to Ronald Reagan and his image, Susan Jeffords explores the links between masculinity and U.S. identity and how their images changed during that decade. Her book powerfully defines a distinctly ideological period in the renegotiation of masculinity in the post-Vietnam era. As Jeffords perceptively notes, Reagan was most effective at constructing and promoting his own image. His election in 1980 and his landslide re-election in 1984 offered politicians and the film industry some insight into "what audiences want to see." Audiences--and constituencies--were looking for characters who stood up for individualism, liberty, anti-governmentalism, militarism, and who embodied a kind of mythic heroism. The administration in Washington and Hollywood filmmakers sensed and tried to fill that need. Jeffords describes how movies meshed inextricably with Reagan's life as he cast himself as a hero and influenced the country to believe the same script. Invoking Clint Eastwood in his speeches and treating scenes from movies as if they were real, Reagan played on his image in order to link popular and national narratives. Hollywood returned the compliment. Through her illuminating and detailed analyses of both the Reagan presidency and many blockbuster movies, Jeffords provides a scenario within which the successes of the New Right and the Reagan presidency can begin to be understood: she both encourages an understanding of how this complicity functioned and provides a framework within which to respond to the New Right's methods and arguments. Rambo, Lethal Weapon, Die Hard, Robocop, Back to the Future, Star Wars, the Indiana Jones series, Mississippi Burning, Rain Man, Batman, and Unforgiven are among the films she discusses. In her closing chapter, she suggests the direction that masculinity is taking in the 1990s.
In Hard Body Pain and Massage Therapy Solutions, Martin Kunsman, a Neuromuscular Massage Therapist, offers insight into what a healthy body looks and feels like.
Demolishing Mr. Perfect Even though she's a nurse at a sperm bank, meeting young, virile professionals every day, Natalie Watson's relationships always seem to suffer from "stress fractures.
And more: Steve Reeves, Charles Atlas, Vic Tanny -- the real story and the real pictures.." . . a superb history of an important facet of American culture." -- The Bookwatch
Guy Martin, the charismatic, uncontainable star of the film, his hair styled by a storm, has this to say: “I can ... Whenever I've come close to being killed, in a car or on a bicycle, it didn't feel to me like the buzz of being alive.
Winter isn't easy. Being fat isn't easy. He can see up his dad's nightgown. There is strange magic up there. If he stares long enough, he will see his future. This book is a celebration of sloppiness, marriage, grief, love, and being naked.
In each of the book's four chapters, a central object of mythical image is refracted across a range of discursive and material spaces: social and private, textual and cinematic, national and international.
Former teen star Olivia Harper has a problem.
Do you ever wonder how healthy your body is?
As the first major anthology on the action film in more than a decade, the volume offers insights into the genre’s historical development, explores its production techniques and visual poetics, and provides reflections on the numerous ...
Artist Book©2001 Deric CarnerEssay by Michelle Levy Published by Scott KiernanVARIOUS/ARTISTSNew York CityDeric Carner received a Masters from the Piet Zwart Institute, Rotterdam, NL and an MA from the University of Plymouth UK. His artist ...