January 2015
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1,289 Reads
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2 Citations
Based on Butler's concept of gender performativity and Connell's theory of the social construction of masculinity, this essay argues that Kureishi's "postethnic" short stories explore contemporary conceptualizations of masculinity: Love in a Blue Time (1997) depicts the disruption of masculine gender practices in the postfeminist era; Midnight All Day (1999) portrays the concomitant transformations of masculinity; The Body and Seven Stories (2002) emphasizes the performativity of masculine identity; and New Stories (2010) transcends traditional, patriarchal and hegemonic notions of masculinity, imagining alternative forms of masculine gender practice, such as the bisexual man or the "feminist house-husband". Since (gender) identity is as much a narrative artifice as literature, Kureishi's stories offer a specific savoir littéraire about the formation of masculine identity. Not only do they contribute to a better understanding of contemporary masculinities, but they also conceive of new forms of masculine identity.