The Last Men on Top The Last Men on Top

The Last Men on Top

    • $2.99
    • $2.99

Publisher Description

A feminist—and the bestselling author of The Age of American Unreason—looks back at the last pre-feminist generation of men who supposedly had it all and asks: what exactly did they have?

How fabulous was life for men in the 1950s and early 1960s? How real is the world depicted by a television show like Mad Men: a world where visibly successful males, so long as they supported their families and contributed to their firms' profitability, could have midday liaisons, impregnate secretaries, and pimp for clients with impunity? In this engaging, witty, and insightful reappraisal, Susan Jacoby challenges both versions of the story--narratives that either romanticize or demonize men's lives back in the good or bad (you choose) old days. She suggests that there were hidden economic and psychological costs that made this "Rat Pack" reality a fantasy, and she also shows why this illusion still holds sway in the worldview of many (including Republicans and social conservatives such as Mitt Romney) who continue to cherish, long for, and advocate for the days when a family lived on the man's paycheck, and the woman stayed at home where she belonged.

Our most unsparing chronicler of unreason and an impassioned social provocateur who is always eager to skewer intellectual laziness and cultural myths, Jacoby comes to the unexpected rescue of the last generation of prefeminist men. An electronic dart of wit and insight.

GENRE
Non-Fiction
RELEASED
2013
23 April
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
64
Pages
PUBLISHER
Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group
SELLER
Random House, LLC
SIZE
6.1
MB
The Hearts of Men The Hearts of Men
1987
Moving Beyond Words Moving Beyond Words
2012
Labor's Love Lost Labor's Love Lost
2014
Of Men and Women Of Men and Women
2017
The Life of I The Life of I
2014
The Life of I Updated Edition The Life of I Updated Edition
2015
The Founding Myth The Founding Myth
2019
The Great Agnostic The Great Agnostic
2013
Why Baseball Matters Why Baseball Matters
2018