These essays show the diverse approaches to masculinity studies...a welcome addition to early American social, cultural, and gender scholarship.
Michael Kimmel,author of Manhood in America:
With New Men, Foster ushers in a new era in masculinity studies. Both historically precise and analytically astute, these essays provide multiple meditations on masculinity before the birth of the nation.
E. Anthony Rotundo,author of American Manhood: Transformations in Masculinity from the Revolution to the Modern Era:
This impressive collection of essays is one of the best books in print on the history of manliness. It covers a broad range of times, places and topics, and it does so at a consistently high level of interest and insight. As a result, New Men will make a great choice for courses on masculinity or early America.
Anne Lombard,author of Making Manhood: Growing Up Male in Early New England:
The essays published here provide fresh perspectives on time-honored topics from the settlement of Jamestown to revolutionary political rhetoric along with provocative insights from new topics such as dreams, desire, and dangerous men in the early modern world. Some essays will provoke wonderful classroom discussions, while others offer important points of departure for future scholarship. All of them are worth reading.
Jane Kamensky,Harry S. Truman Professor of American Civilization, Brandeis University:
In lucid prose, the contributors map the contours of early American manhood from first encounters through the Revolution, and from the marriage bed to the battlefield. The results demonstrate the continuing vitality of gender as a category of analysis as well as the fascinating, sometimes terrifying dynamism of the colonial Atlantic world.
Steve Goddard's History Wire:
In this collection of essays, the editor seeks to answer to what extent manliness in early America shaped the nation's character and institutions and what roles race, ethnicity, and class played in forming masculinity.
Mark. E. Kann:
New Men brings to life the many ways by which gender shaped early American relationships, interracial encounters, and political authority.
Carl Robert Keyes:
New Men: Manliness in Early America, a collection of essays edited by Thomas A. Foster, examines various conceptions of masculinity from the founding of Jamestown in the early seventeenth century through the American Revolution. Indeed, Foster stresses the impossibility of identifying a single gendered American masculinity given its contingent relationship to status, race, sexuality, and regional identity. Accordingly, the dozens of essays in New Menrange in time and place in order to 'address the variety of standards and ideals of manliness in early America and highlight the breadth of differences among them' (1).