Books

  1. Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood
    Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood

  2. Many Faces of Bereavement
    Many Faces of Bereavement

  3. The All-new Dieter's Guide to Wait Loss During Safe Sex, P.C.Sex and Lite Sex
    The All-new Dieter's Guide to Wait Loss During Safe Sex, P.C.Sex and Lite Sex

  4. Getting It Right the First Time: Creating a Healthy Marriage
    Getting It Right the First Time: Creating a Healthy Marriage

  5. Raising Our Children to Be Resilient
    Raising Our Children to Be Resilient

  6. How to Marry the Rich
    How to Marry the Rich

  7. The Good Nanny Book
    The Good Nanny Book

  8. Rob Parr's Post-pregnancy Workout
    Rob Parr's Post-pregnancy Workout

  9. Retroage: The Four-Step Program to Reverse the Aging Process
    Retroage: The Four-Step Program to Reverse the Aging Process

  10. Getting Over Getting Older
    Getting Over Getting Older

  11. Preventing Arthritis: A Holistic Approach to Life Without Pain
    Preventing Arthritis: A Holistic Approach to Life Without Pain

  12. His Brother
    His Brother

  13. Writing Begins at Home
    Writing Begins at Home

  14. S/NVQ Level 2 Hairdressing: Tutor's Resource File
    S/NVQ Level 2 Hairdressing: Tutor's Resource File

  15. S/NVQ Level 2 Beauty Therapy: Tutor's Resource File
    S/NVQ Level 2 Beauty Therapy: Tutor's Resource File

  16. Minute
    Minute

  17. Baby Massage for the Vtct Certificate Student Book
    Baby Massage for the Vtct Certificate Student Book

  18. USP DI 2001: Advice for the Patient Vol II
    USP DI 2001: Advice for the Patient Vol II

  19. USP DI: Advice for the Patient v. 2
    USP DI: Advice for the Patient v. 2

  20. Creative Play
    Creative Play

  21. The Complete Book of Food Counts
    The Complete Book of Food Counts

  22. Thin Tastes Better
    Thin Tastes Better

  23. Natural Medicine for Prostate Problems (The Dell Natural Medicine Library)
    Natural Medicine for Prostate Problems (The Dell Natural Medicine Library)

  24. The Modern Book of Stretching: Strength and Flexibility at Any Age
    The Modern Book of Stretching: Strength and Flexibility at Any Age

  25. Having Healthy Relationships
    Having Healthy Relationships

Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood
Average customer rating: 3 out of 5 stars
  • Scholarly nonsense
  • True Testimony: "Castration" is a Great Book
  • What a real Eunuch has to say.
  • A Unique History of Eunuchs
Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood
Gary Taylor
Manufacturer: Routledge
ProductGroup: Book
Binding: Paperback

HistoryHistory | Subjects | Books | Africa | Americas | Ancient | Arctic & Antarctica | Asia | Australia & Oceania | Books on CD | Books on Cassette | Europe | Gay & Lesbian | Historical Study | Large Print | Middle East | Military | Military Science | Russia | United States | World
GeneralGeneral | Sex | Health, Mind & Body | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Psychology & Counseling | Health, Mind & Body | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Gender Studies | Social Sciences | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
GeneralGeneral | Sociology | Social Sciences | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
CultureCulture | Sociology | Social Sciences | Nonfiction | Subjects | Books
Similar Items:
  1. Running Scared: Masculinity and the Representation of the Male Body (Culture and the Moving Image)
  2. Eunuchs and Castrati: A Cultural History
  3. The Male Body: A New Look at Men in Public and in Private
  4. The World of the Castrati: The History of an Extraordinary Operatic Phenomenon
  5. The Mating Mind: How Sexual Choice Shaped the Evolution of Human Nature

ASIN: 0415938813

Book Description

Castration is a lively history of the meaning, function, and act of castration from its place in the early church to its secular reinvention in the Renaissance as a spiritualized form of masculinity in its 20th century position at the core of psychoanalysis.

Customer Reviews:

2 out of 5 stars Scholarly nonsense.......2003-06-30

If you wish to read something for entertainment's sake, then this book will suffice. Written by an English Professor, this book lacks the sort of critical thought those of us in the science deptartments want for. Purportedly an 'Abbreviated History Of Western Manhood,' it is rather an exercise in academic arcana - an attempt to think of something through its opposite or, in this case, its abuse. One is hardly compelled to reconsider ideas about what manhood means. There is nothing in Taylor's "treatise" to support such nonsense as, "This is a specter that has haunted men for centuries: the fear that manhood will become, or has already become, obsolete, superfluous, ridiculous, at best quaint, at worst disgusting." Really? In whose misandrist manifesto? The concept "Western Man" is, after all, just that - a concept. There is no such unified and homogeneous group and no such "specter" has haunted it for so long. That men should cringe at the word castration is less a mystery than than why women should fear rape. In short, Taylor's analysis of the history and purposes of castration sheds less light on the "cultural construct of masculinity" than on the sadistic sexual abuse and humiliation with which males can be threatened and subjugated. That some of his readers find him witty or funny at times is only because Taylor's treatment of his subject is often sophmoric.

In my view, today's attitudes toward manhood and males are best understood in terms of our lacking moral sympathies toward them. Taylor's book is no exception. We are not a generation influenced by Freud so much as by feminism. Thus, the historical abuse and mutilation of women is a subject deadly serious and pertinent to us while the sexual abuse and humiliation of men is treated like something that never happened - that is, something we've misconstured, or, in Tayor's case, given a fictional reinterpretation, mocked and trivalized. Taylor's ignorant belief (not first person, of course) about the sexual prowess of eunuchs is one case in point. Another case in point is Tayor's view that for most of western history castration was a mark of power and divinity and, as the ultimate abrogation of sexual desire, had wide spread currency among Christian metaphysicians. This is nonsense. Taylor is arguing anecdotally to his own foregone conclusions. He wasn't there to take any polls. No doubt, some Christian cults managed to appropriate practices of sexual mutilation already in place - just as Christian nihilism helped to make slavery seem worthy. This did not, however, make such practices any more agreeable as hardly anyone wanted to suffer either condition themselves. In any case, the spiritualized feelings attained by some Christian monks through self mutilation would have appalled the Greeks - the paragons of western civilization - as it has most men throughout all of human history.

Taylor's book about castration will score a few points for the concept of cultural relativism on a subject that now seems, at best, uncontroversial or, at worst, comic to the immature. Should he chose to write volumes exploring the gamut of humanity's attitudes regarding every other form of sexual nastiness, he will no doubt find endless tolerance to be feted as well. Would he dare?

5 out of 5 stars True Testimony: "Castration" is a Great Book.......2002-04-03

Gary Taylor's "Castration" is an endlessly fascinating, provocative, and highly entertaining exploration not only of the history of the unkindest cut but of the evolving meaning of manhood from ancient times to the present, and even into the future. Scrupulously scholarly and challenging, the book is nevertheless actually fun to read. Drawing extensively on literature, religion, and psychology, Taylor methodically examines the evolution of castration and its relationship to agriculture, faith, race, gender, and science. I found his analysis of the passage from Matthew's Gospel where Jesus addresses the topic of eunuchs to be especially enlightening. Did Christ really salute self-made eunuchs? Was he really anti-family? This book will not fail to teach you, provoke you, and force you to reconsider your ideas about what manhood means.

1 out of 5 stars What a real Eunuch has to say........2001-08-02

I have not read this book but I am a real life Eunuch. I had my testicles surgically removed. In an Interview on Salon.com the author says "Castration does not get rid of the sexual drive, get rid of erections or any amount of sexual activity." WRONG!!! How would he know any way? He is NOT a Eunuch. He has had a vasectomy but that is totally different. I can speak from experience; when a man becomes a eunuch his sex drive drops to absolute zero. I had a very strong sex drive prior to castration but it is now completely gone. The only way for a Eunuch to regain his sex drive is to take some form of testosterone replacement. I have never heard of any real life Eunuch who was not on testosterone replacement therapy that had a sex drive. Don't waste your time on this book; the author obviously didn't do enough, if any research. If you want to learn about Eunuchs then search the web. There are a lot of us out there, and our numbers are growing.

5 out of 5 stars A Unique History of Eunuchs.......2000-12-26

According to Gary Taylor in _Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood_ (Routledge) a castrated man is just what some women would want, and have wanted for centuries. This is bound to sound peculiar to those in the twentieth century raised on Freud, or more recently those who have followed the follies of John and Lorena Bobbitt, but before Freud, castration always meant removal of the testicles, never removal of the penis. It was reproduction that was important then, and the "stones" were what mattered. Now that we have reproduced entirely enough, the "scepter" is more important. Sex for pleasure is now more vital than sex for reproduction.

Eunuchs, just like oxen, were useful. They guarded the harems, for one job, but power in the bedchamber within some societies became legal or military power. A eunuch had no testicles, but had enough genitalia left to play games in the harem. Jesus spoke highly of eunuchs, and Taylor makes the case that he was speaking literally. Augustine, however, insisted that Jesus's words were an allegory to promote priestly celibacy.

Taylor is a Shakespearean scholar (the editor of the Oxford Shakespeare), and in a show of scholarly breadth cites plenty of the Bard, but cites also other Elizabethan playwrights as well as Tori Amos and Christina Aguilera. Funny, provocative, scholarly, and decidedly offbeat, _Castration_ is a witty tour-de-force.

Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood.(Book Review) : An article from: Renaissance Quarterly
Average customer rating: Not rated
    Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood.(Book Review) : An article from: Renaissance Quarterly
    Scott Oldenburg
    Manufacturer: Thomson Gale
    ProductGroup: Book
    Binding: Digital

    GeneralGeneral | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | Books | Classics | Comic | Contemporary | Literary
    GeneralGeneral | Literature & Fiction | Subjects | e-Docs | Formats | Books
    ASIN: B000DN5MUM
    Release Date: 2005-12-15

    Book Description

    This digital document is an article from Renaissance Quarterly, published by Thomson Gale on March 22, 2003. The length of the article is 779 words. The page length shown above is based on a typical 300-word page. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Digital Locker immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

    Citation Details
    Title: Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood.(Book Review)
    Author: Scott Oldenburg
    Publication: Renaissance Quarterly (Magazine/Journal)
    Date: March 22, 2003
    Publisher: Thomson Gale
    Volume: 56 Issue: 1 Page: 211(3)

    Article Type: Book Review

    Distributed by Thomson Gale

    Books:

    1. The Mars and Venus Diet and Exercise Solution: Create the Brain Chemistry of Health, Happiness and Lasting Romance
    2. Your Child with Special Needs (Positive Parenting)
    3. How to Find Love Mid-life
    4. Help and Hope for Hair Loss
    5. Single Again: A Guide for Women Starting Over
    6. Brain Power: A Neurosurgeon's Complete Program to Maintain and Enhance Brain Fitness Throughout Your Life
    7. Arthritis: Don't Learn to Live with It
    8. Health Ecology
    9. Castration: An Abbreviated History of Western Manhood
    10. Coping with Life's Stressers

    Books