Male Impersonators

Simp­son pulls the pants off pop­u­lar cul­ture and wit­tily winks at the Freudian sym­bols lurk­ing beneath.’ (FOUR STARS OUT OF FOUR) – The Mod­ern Review

This set of high-spirited essays dis­plays more insight into the mas­cu­line mys­tique than has the decade of earnest men’s stud­ies that pre­ceded it. Simp­son has an unerr­ing eye for the inner logic and pre­tences of a wide range of mas­cu­line enter­prises and sym­bols. This is queer theory without the jargon and is a must for anyone interested in things male. General and  academic readers at all levels.’ – Choices

What is hap­pen­ing when men and their sex­u­al­i­ties become the focus of the camera’s gaze? Mark Simpson’s bril­liant, witty, up-to-the-minute analy­sis shat­ters com­pla­cen­cies, old and new.’ – Alan Sin­field, Uni­ver­sity of Sussex

Mark Simp­son detects and dis­sects the myths of machismo and its atten­dant media cir­cus with refresh­ing gusto and wit.’  – John Ashbery

It’s not only women who don’t have the phal­lus – men don’t have it either – just the inad­e­quate penis! This book cheered me up with the reminder that when it gets down to it, both sexes are just great pre­tenders.’ – Lor­raine Gamman

Like me this book plays with men. Provoca­tive, irrev­er­ent, acer­bic and witty, it offers one gigan­tic intel­lec­tual orgasm after another.’  – Margi Clarke

A brilliantly-positioned array of fire­crack­ers, ele­phant traps and banana skins designed to trick con­ven­tional male­ness into show­ing it’s true hand, or some extrem­ity. Simpson capers like Robin Goodfellow, stripping off the fig leaves with exuberance.’ – Jonathan Keates, The Observer

CLEVERENGAGINGINCISIVE.’ – The Guardian

EMINENTLY READABLE.’ – My Prime

Mark Simpson’s Male Imper­son­ators could do for male sex­u­al­ity what Camilla Paglia did for women, find­ing latent homo sub­texts to Marky Mark, Clint East­wood and Tom Cruise’s base­ball bat.’ - Melody Maker

‘Male Imper­son­ators quickly reveals itself to be dif­fer­ent and, arguably more insight­ful than many pre­vi­ous ‘Mas­culin­ity books’. Male Imper­son­ators makes a timely and exem­plary addi­tion to cult stud’s ‘Return to Freud’. It has an excel­lent read­abil­ity fac­tor com­pared to many oth­ers freighted with dull writ­ing.’  – Per­ver­sions

DEFT AND PERSUASIVE DISCUSSION ON THE SUBJECT.’

– Stage and Television Today

These smash­ingly provoca­tive essays by the spunky Brit writer Mark Simp­son det­o­nate myths, stereo­types and icons, gay as well as straight. The psycho-social line sep­a­rat­ing homo and het­ero male­ness, he ful­somely shows, is much fuzzier than Robert Bly and Pat Buchanan find it to be.’

Lambda Book Report

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