Dying to be Men: Youth, Masculinity and Social Exclusion

Front Cover
Routledge, May 4, 2005 - Family & Relationships - 194 pages

One of the first comparative reflections of its kind, this book examines the challenges that young men face when trying to grow up in societies where violence is the norm. Barker, who has worked directly with low-income youth and witnessed first hand the violence he describes, provides a compelling account of the young men's struggles. He discusses the problems these men face in other areas of their lives, including the difficulty of staying in school, the multiple challenges of coming of age as men in the face of social exclusion, including finding meaningful employment, and their interactions with young women, including sexual behaviour and the implications of this for HIV/AIDS prevention.

The book presents examples of evaluated programs that have been able to aid young men in rethinking what it means to be a man and ultimately focuses on 'voices of resistance' – young men who find ways to stay out of violence and to show respect and equality in their relationships, even in settings where male violence and rigid attitudes about manhood are prevalent.

 

Contents

Chapter 1 Why the worry about young men?
1
Chapter 2 Are you a hippy or a kicker?
12
Chapter 3 Dont worry Im not a thief
26
Chapter 4 The trouble with young men
40
Chapter 5 In the headlines
57
Chapter 6 No place at school
81
Chapter 7 If you dont work you have to steal
98
Chapter 8 In the heat of the moment
113
Chapter 9 Learning to live with women becoming fathers
129
Chapter 10 Dying to be men living as men
140
Appendix
153
Notes
164
References
169
Index
176
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