General references

Abbott, K. (2003). Producing men? Masculinities, boys’ employment and farm labour in early twentieth–century western Australia. Limina: A Journal of Historical and Cultural Studies,9, 38–58.

Abrahamsson, Lena & Somerville, Margaret (2007). Changing storylines and masculine bodies in Australian coal mining organizations. Norma, 2(1).

Adair, Daryl, John Nauright, & Murray Phillips (1998). Playing Fields Through to Battle Fields: The Development of Australian Sporting Manhood in its Imperial Context, circa 1850–1918. In Richard Nile, Clive Moore & Kay Saunders (Eds.). Australian Masculinities. St. Lucia, API Network & UQP. [Journal of Australian Studies, 56, 51–67]

Barnett, Chelsea. (2015). ‘Working hard and saving up’: Australian masculinity and meanings of work and class in ‘Smiley’ (1956). Lilith: A Feminist History Journal, No. 21, Aug: 93-106.

Bessant, Judith & Watts, Rob (1998). Masculinity and violence: an enthnographic exploration of the bodgies, 1948–1958. In Hazlehurst, K. M., & Hazlehurst, C. (Eds.). Gangs and youth subcultures: international explorations. New Brunswick, NJ: Transaction.

Biber, Katherine (2000). “A certain look in the eye”: masculinity in Australian cinema from 1970. Unpublished Thesis (Ph. D.), Dept. of History, Faculty of Arts, University of Sydney.

Biber, Katherine (2001). The threshold moment: masculinity at home and on the road in Australian cinema. Limina, 7, 26–46.

Biber, Katherine, Tom Sear, & Dave Trudinger (Eds). (1999). Playing the Man: New Approaches to Masculinity. Syd- ney: Pluto Press. Includes: Katherine Biber: ‘Turned Out Real Nice After All’: Death and Masculinity in Aus- tralian Cinema / Melissa Harper: A Boy’s Own Adventure: George Morrison on Foot across Australia / Laila Elmoos: The DeepSea and the Shallow Water: Masculinity, Mateship and Work Practices on Sydney’s Water- front in the 1950s / Tom Sear: Playgirl Executives: Images of Men and Work in Early 1960s Australian Pulp Fiction.

Blair, Dale, James (1994). The Glorification of Australian Masculinity and The Reshaping of Australia’s Great War Experience. Sabretache, 35(2), 29–34.

Blaschek, Brad (2005). The ignorant labelled it a ladies’ game’: masculinity in Australian tennis in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. ASSH Studies in Sports History, 16, 1–54.

Bollen, Jonathan (2005). Remembering masculinities in the theatre of war. Australasian Drama Studies, 46, 3–19.

Bolton, R. (2018). Australian men and the yoke of ‘the provider’. Paper presented at the Making it Like a Man: men, masculinities and the modern career, Helsinki, Finland, October 25-26, 2018

Boucher, Leigh (2004). Masculinity gone mad: settler colonialism, medical discourse and the white body in late nineteenth–century Victoria. Lilith, 13, 51–67.

Brice, Ian D. (2001). Ethnic masculinities in Australian boys’ schools: Scots and Irish secondary schools in late nineteenth–century Australia. Paedagogica Historica, 37(1), 139–152.

Buchbinder, David (1994). Mateship, Gallipoli and the Eternal Masculine. In Fuery, Patrick. (Ed.). Representation, Discourse & Desire: Contemporary Australian Culture and Critical Theory. Melbourne: Longman Chesire, pp. 115–137.

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Butterss, Philip (1999). Becoming a man in Australian film in the early 1990s: The Big Steal, Death in Brunswick, Strictly Ballroom and The Heartbreak Kid. Australian Studies, 14(1–2), 79–94.

Butterss, Philip (2000). Australian masculinity on the road. Media International Australia, Incorporating Culture and Policy, 95(May), 227–236.

Caesar, Adrian (1998). National myths of manhood: Anzacs and others. In Bennett, B., Strauss, J., & Wallace–Crabbe, C. (Eds.). The Oxford literary history of Australia. Melbourne: Oxford University Press, pp. 147–165.

Casella, E. C. (1995). “A woman doesn’t represent business here”: negotiating femininity in nineteenth–century colonial Australia. Kroeber Anthropological Society Papers,pp. 33–43.

Coad, D. (2002). Gender trouble down under: Australian masculinities. Valenciennes: Presses universitaires de Valenciennes.

Coldwell, Ian (2007). New farming masculinities: ‘More than just shit–kickers’, we’re ‘switched–on’ farmers wanting to ‘balance lifestyle, sustainability and coin’. Journal of Sociology, 43(1), 87–103.

Collins, Jock, Greg Noble, Scott Poynting, and Paul Tabar. (2000). Kebabs, Kids, Cops and Crime: Youth, Ethnicity and Crime. Sydney: Pluto Press
Includes: Chapter 5, ‘Someone to Fear’: Lebanese Youth, Gangs, Masculinity and Racism.

Connell, R. W. (1998b). Studying Australian masculinities. Journal of Interdisciplinary Gender Studies, 3(2), 1–8.

Connell, R. W. (2003). Australian masculinities. In Stephen Tomsen, & Mike Donaldson (Eds.), Male Trouble: Looking at Australian Masculinities, Melbourne, Pluto Press, pp. 9–21.

Corn, Aaron (2007). To see their father’s eyes: expressions of ancestry through yarrata among Yolnu popular bands from Arnhem Land, Australia. In Jarman–Ivens, F. (Ed.). Oh boy!: masculinities and popular music. New York: Routledge.

Crilly, S. (2004). “Gods in our own world” representations of troubled and troubling masculinities in some Australian films, 1991–2001. Thesis (Ph. D.)—University of Adelaide.

Crotty, Martin(1999a). Heroes of Australia: race, nation and masculinity in Australian boys’ adventure stories, 1875–1920. Bulletin(Olive Pink Society), 11(1–2), 22–27.

Crotty, Martin(1999b). The woman in the boy: the feminine ideal in the fictional Australian public schoolboy. Journal of Interdisciplinary Gender Studies, 4(1), 3–17.

Crotty, Martin(2000). Manly and moral: the making of middle–class men in the Australian public schools. International Journal of the History of Sport,17, 11–30.

Crotty, Martin(2001a). Making the Australian male: middle–class masculinity 1870–1920. Carlton South, Vic.: MelbourneUniversity Press.

Crotty, Martin(2001b). Frontier fantasies: boys’ adventure stories and the construction of masculinity in Australia, 1870–1920. Journal of Australian Colonial History, 3(1), 55–76. [fuller version published as chapter in Crotty (2001a)]

Crotty, Martin(2003). The making of the man: Australian public schoolboy sporting violence, 1850–1914. International journal of the history of sport, 20(3), 1–16.

Crotty, Martin(2006). Performing Military Manhood: The Wartime Head of the River Races in Melbourne, 1915–1918. Journal of Australian Studies,89, [15]–26.

Crowley, V. (2002). Drag kings ‘down under’: an archive and introspective of a few aussie blokes. Journal of homosexuality, 43(3–4), 285–308.

Davies, B., & Whitehouse, H. (1997). Men on the boundaries: landscapes and seascapes. Journal of gender studies, 6(3), 237–254.

Dixon, R. (1995). Writing the colonial adventure: race, gender, and nation in Anglo–Australian popular fiction, 1875–1914. Cambridge; New York: CambridgeUniversity Press.

Donaldson, M. J. (2003). Studying up: the masculinity of the hegemonic. In Donaldson, M., & Tomsen, S. (Eds.). Male Trouble: looking at Australian Masculinities. Melbourne North: Pluto Press, pp. 156–179.

Donaldson, M., & Tomsen, S. (Eds.) (2003). Male trouble: looking at Australian masculinities. North Melbourne. Victoria: Pluto Press Australia. Contents: Introduction, Australian masculinities, by Connell, R. W.; Masculinity, (homo)sexuality and contemporary sexual politics, by Dowsett, Gary W.; Car culture, technological dominance and young men of the working class, by Walker, Linley; Fantasy islands: desire, ‘race’ and violence, by Cunneen, Chris & Stubbs, Julie; ‘A gross overreaction’: violence, honour and the sanctified heterosexual male body, by Tomsen, Stephen; Men, identity and military culture, by Agostino, Katerina; Protest masculinity and Lebanese youth in western Sydney: an ethnographic study, by Poynting, Scott; Noble, Greg & Tabar, Paul; Studying up: the masculinity of the hegemonic, by Donaldson, Mike; Aussie Rules!: schoolboy football and masculine embodiment, by Wedgwood, Nikki; A man’s game: sport and masculinities, by Rowe, David & McKay, Jim.

Donaldson, Mike, Raymond Hibbins, Richard Howson, and Bob Pease. (eds.) (2009). Migrant Men: Critical Studies of Masculinities and the Migrant Experience. Routledge.
Foreword / Michael Kimmel.
1. Men and Masculinities on the Move / Raymond Hibbins and Bob Pease.
Part I: Theorising Masculinities and Migration.
2. Theorising Hegemonic Masculinity: Contradiction, Hegemony and Dislocation / Richard Howson.
3. Policy, Men and Transnationalism / Jeff Hearn and Richard Howson.
4. Migrants, Masculinities and Work in the Australian National Imaginary / Jane Haggis and Susanne Schech.
Part II: Regional Patterns of Masculine Migration.
5. Immigrant Men and Domestic Life: Renegotiating the Patriarchal Bargain? / Bob Pease.
6. Rethinking Masculinities in the African Diaspora / Ndungi wa Mungai and Bob Pease.
7. Machismo and the Construction of Immigrant Latin American Masculinities / Paul Crossley and Bob Pease.
8. Looking for Respect: Lebanese Immigrant Young Men in Australia / Scott Poynting, Paul Tabar and Greg Noble.
9. The “New” Chinese Entrepreneur in Australia: Continuities in or Challenges to Traditional Hegemonic Masculinities? / Raymond Hibbins.
10. Indonesian Muslim Masculinities in Australia / Pam Nilan, Mike Donaldson and Richard Howson.
11. Navigating Masculinities Across the Cultural Ditch: Tales from Maori Men in Australia / Richard Pringle and Paul Whitinui.
12. Men, Migration and Hegemonic Masculinity / Mike Donaldson and Richard Howson.

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Downing, Karen. (2014). Restless Men: Masculinity and Robinson Crusoe, 1788-1840.

Dowsett, Gary W. (1998). Wusses and willies: masculinity and contemporary sexual. politics. Journal of Interdisciplinary Gender Studies, 3(2), 9–22.

Dowsett, Gary W. (2003). ‘Johnnie comes marching ... where?’ Australian gay men, masculinity, HIV/AIDS and sex. Culture, health and sexuality, 5(3), 237–247.

Edgar, D. E. (1997). Men, mateship, marriage: exploring macho myths and the way forward. Sydney, NSW, Australia; New York, NY, USA: HarperCollins Publishers.

Elam, H. J., & Jackson, K. A. (2005). Black cultural traffic: crossroads in global performance and popular culture. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Elliott, K. (2019). Negotiations between Progressive and ‘Traditional’ Expressions of Masculinity among Young Australian Men. Journal of Sociology, 55(1), 108-123. 10.1177/1440783318802996

Evans, Raymond (1998). ‘So Tough’? Masculinity and Rock ‘n’ Roll Culture in Post–War Australia. In Richard Nile, Clive Moore & Kay Saunders (Eds.), Australian Masculinities. St Lucia, API Network & UQP. [Journal of Australian Studies, 56, 125–137]

Evans, Raymond, & Bill Thorpe (1998). Commanding Men: Masculinities and the Convict System. In Richard Nile, Clive Moore & Kay Saunders (Eds.), Australian Masculinities. St Lucia, API Network and UQP.

Evers, C. (2005). Becoming–man, becoming–wave. Unpublished Thesis (Ph. D.), Dept. of Gender Studies, Faculty of Arts, University of Sydney.

Flood, Michael; Kegan, Judith; Gardiner, Bob Pease; & Keith Pringle (Eds.) (2007). International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities. Routledge [entries include: “Australian Masculinities”]

Garton, Stephen (1998). War and Masculinity in Twentieth Century Australia. In Richard Nile, Clive Moore & Kay Saunders (Eds.). Australian Masculinities. St Lucia: API Network & UQP. [Journal of Australian Studies, 56, pp. 86–95]

Gerster, R. (1996). Soldier heroes. Australian historical studies, 27(106), 206–208.

Gilbert, R., & Gilbert, P. (1998). Masculinity goes to school. London; New York: Routledge.

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Godfrey, B. (2003). Counting and accounting for the decline in non-lethal violence in England, Australia, and New Zealand, 1880–1920. British journal of criminology, 43(2), 340–353.

Gould, Richard A. (1968). Masculinity and mutilation in a primitive society. Medical Opinion and Review, 4(1), 58–62, 64, 68–9, 75.

Grbich, C. F. (1997). Male primary caregivers in Australia: the process of becoming and being. Acta sociologica [Norway], 40(4), 335–355.

Grewal, K. (2007). The ‘young Muslim man’in Australian public discourse. Transforming cultures eJournal, 2(1).

Harper, M. (2005). Emigrant homecomings: the return movement of emigrants, 1600–2000. Manchester; New York: ManchesterUniversity Press

Harrison, Rodney. (2002). Archaeology and the colonial encounter: Kimberley spearpoints, cultural identity and masculinity in the north of Australia. Journal of Social Archaeology, 2(3), pp. 352-377.

Hartig, K., & Dunn, K. M. (1998). Roadside memorials: interpreting new deathscapes in Newcastle, New South Wales. Australian Geographical Studies, 36(1), 5–20.

Hatchell, H. (2004). Privilege of whiteness: adolescent male students’ resistance to racism in an Australian classroom. Race ethnicity and education, 7(2), 99–114.

Hibbins, R. (2005). Migration and gender identity among Chinese skilled male migrants to Australia. Geoforum, 36(2), 167–180.

Hibbins, Ray. (1997). Migration and Construction of Masculinities. Paper to Conference, Masculinities: Renegotiating Genders. University of Wollongong, 20 June.

Hibbins, Ray. (2000a). Male Gender Identity Among Chinese Male Migrants: Multiple Hegemonic Masculinities?. Paper presented at the East Asian Masculinities Conference, University of Queensland, Brisbane.

Hibbins, Ray. (2000b). Beyond Hegemonic Masculinity: Rites of Passage among Chinese Male Migrants. Paper presented at Manning the New Millennium: An Interdisciplinary Masculinities Conference, Surfers’ Paradise, Gold Coast.

Hibbins, Ray. (2001). Migration and Masculinities: Experiences of Recent Chinese Male Migrants in Brisbane. PhD Thesis, University of Queensland.

Hibbins, Ray. (2005). Migration and gender identity among Chinese skilled male migrants to Australia. Geoforum 36: 167-180.

Hibbins, Ray. (2006). Leisure and Identity Formation among Young Taiwanese Transnational Migrants pp 25-38 In Bowling Together: Seven Articles from the Malmo Conference Malmo: Textbyran MLT AB.

Hibbins, Ray. (2006). Sexuality and constructions of gender identity among Chinese male migrants in Australia. Asian Studies Review, v. 30 no. 3, Sept: (289)-303.

Hibbins, Ray. (2013). Reconstructing masculinities, migration, and transnational leisure spaces. In Leisure, Women and Gender, Venture Publishing.Inc., United States.

Hidayat, R. (2015). “My wife is the boss”: Muslim men negotiating masculinity in Australia. In Muslim Identity Formation in Religiously Diverse Society, Eds. Derya Iner and Salih Yucel, Cambridge Scholar Publishing.

Hodgens, J. & Matthews, R. (1998). Late twentieth century Australian rules and nineteenth century moral discourse. In Hickey, C. J., Fitzclarence, L., & Matthews, R. (Eds.). Where the boys are: masculinity, sport and education. Geelong [Vic.]: Deakin Centre for Education and Change, Faculty of Education, Deakin University, pp. 41–53.

Hogan, Eleanor (2000). ‘Manhood’, ‘boyhood’ and reading the Melbourne weekend papers: the my(th)op(oet)ic consumption of family life. In West, R., & Lay, F. (Eds.). Subverting masculinity: hegemonic and alternative versions of masculinity in contemporary culture. GENUS—gender in modern culture, 1. Amsterdam: Rodopi, pp.189–206.

Hogg, Robert. (2012). Men and Manliness on the Frontier: Queensland and British Columbia in the mid-nineteenth century.

Holland, Felicity & O’Sullivan, Jane (1999). ‘Lethal larrikins’: cinematic subversions of mythical masculinities in Blackrock and The Boys. Antipodes[Brooklyn, New York], 13(2), 79–84.

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Hughson, J. (2000). The Boys are Back in Town: Soccer Support and the Social Reproduction of Masculinity. Journal of Sport & Social Issues, 24(1), 8–23.

Hurst, D. (2001). Violence and the crisis of masculinity in the USA, Australia and Mongolia. Development, 44(3), 99–103.

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Inglis, Murray (2001). Representations of men in Australian film. Australian Screen Education, 26/27, 46–57.

Irving, Helen (1993). Republicanism, Royalty and Tales of Australian Manhood. Communal/Plural, 2, 139–152.

Jaggard, E. (1999). Australian surf life-saving and the ‘forgotten members’. Australian Historical Studies, 30(112), 23–43.

Jaggard, E. (2001). Tempering the testosterone: masculinity, women and Australian surf lifesaving. International Journal of the History of Sport, 18(4), 16–36.

Jayasena, N. A. (2003). Contested masculinities: Crises in colonial male identity in the 20th century. Unpublished Ph.D., University of California, Riverside, United States— California.

Johinke, Rebecca (2000). Misogyny, muscles and machines: cars and masculinity in Australian literature. Australian Studies, 15(2). Co–published in Callahan, D. (Ed.) (2001). Contemporary issues in Australian literature (pp. 95–111). London: Frank Cass.

Kaladelfos, Amanda. (2009). “Call All Male Offenders By Their Right Name”: Masculinity and the Age of Consent. Melbourne Historical Journal, Special Issue 1: 1-19.

Kaladelfos, Amanda. (2013). ‘Until Death Does Part Us’: Male Friendship, Intimacy, and Violence in Late Colonial Australia’, in Graham Willett and Yorick Smaal (Eds.), Intimacy, Violence and Activism: Gay and Lesbian Perspectives VII, Clayton, Vic, Monash University Press: 39-55.

Kaladelfos. Amanda. (2012). ‘The ‘Condemned Criminals’: Sexual Violence, Race, and Manliness in colonial Australia. Women’s History Review, Vol. 21, Issue 5 (August): 697-714.

Keddie, A. (2006). Fighting, anger, frustration and tears: Matthew’s story of hegemonic masculinity. Oxford Review of Education, 32(4), 521–534.

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Kiernander, A., Bollen, J., & Parr, B. (Eds.) (2006). What a man’s gotta do? Masculinities in performance. Armidale, N.S.W.: CALLTS. Includes: Kelly, Veronica: The men and the boys: the national dimensions of adult and juvenile masculinity in post–federation Australia, as performed by Oscar Asche and Minnie Tittell Brune, pp. 37–55 / McPherson, Ailsa: A soldier and a man?: masculinity, theatricality and the military experience in late nineteenth–century New South Wales, pp. 56–71 / Kiernander, Adrian: Moving out: centrifugal patterns of masculinity in urban Australian plays, 1955–70 and 1985–2000, pp. 72–86; Pender, Anne: Men of the past?: Barry Humphries and Australian masculinity, pp. 87–105 / Bollen, Jonathan: Boxing the man: fighting the choreography of gender, race and generation in recent Australian theatre, pp. 152–169 / Jayasinghe, Laknath: Nick Cave, vocal performance and the production of masculinity, pp. 190–207.

Kiernander, Adrian (2005). What’s a man to do?: Images of rural Australian masculinities in three plays of the 1950s: Reedy River, The Bastard Country and Lola Montez. Australasian Drama Studies, 46, 38–57.

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Liepins, R. (2000). Making men: the construction and representation of agriculture–based masculinities in Australia and New Zealand. Rural Sociology, 65(4), 605–620.

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Lucas, Rose (1998). Dragging it out: tales of masculinity in Australian cinema, from Crocodile Dundee to Priscilla, Queen of the Desert. In Richard Nile, Clive Moore & Kay Saunders (Eds.), Australian Masculinities. St Lucia, API Network & UQP. [Journal of Australian Studies, 56, 138–146]

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Moore, Clive (1998b). Behaving Outrageously: Contemporary Gay Masculinity. In Richard Nile, Clive Moore, & Kay Saunders (Eds.), Australian Masculinities, St Lucia, API Network & UQP. [Journal of Australian Studies, 56, 158–168]

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