In a pathbreaking new assessment of the shaping of black male
identity in the early twentieth century, Martin Summers explores
how middle-class African American and African Caribbean immigrant
men constructed a gendered sense of self through organizational
life, work, leisure, and cultural production. Examining both the
public and private aspects of gender formation, Summers challenges
the current trajectory of masculinity studies by treating black men
as historical agents in their own identity formation, rather than
as screens on which white men projected their own racial and gender
anxieties and desires.
Manliness and Its Discontents focuses on four distinct yet
overlapping social milieus: the fraternal order of Prince Hall
Freemasonry; the black nationalist Universal Negro Improvement
Association, or the Garvey movement; the modernist circles of the
Harlem Renaissance; and the campuses of historically black Howard
and Fisk Universities. Between 1900 and 1930, Summers argues,
dominant notions of what it meant to be a man within the black
middle class changed from a Victorian ideal of
manliness--characterized by the importance of producer values,
respectability, and patriarchy--to a modern ethos of masculinity,
which was shaped more by consumption, physicality, and sexuality.
Summers evaluates the relationships between black men and black
women as well as relationships among black men themselves,
broadening our understanding of the way that gender works along
with class, sexuality, and age to shape identities and produce
relationships of power.