d) General

Armengol, Josep M. (2008). Re/Presenting Men: Cultural and Literary Constructions of Masculinity in the U.S. Saarsbruck: VDM Publishing.

Chevannes, B. (1999). What You Sow Is What You Reap: Problems in the construction of male misidentity in Jamaica. Kingston, Jamaica: Grace, Kennedy Foundation Lecture.

Chevannes, B. (2001). Learning to Be a Man. Kingston, Jamaica: UWI Press.

Greenberg, J. (2006). “Goodbye Serbian Kennedy”: Zoran Dindic and the new democratic masculinity in Serbia. East European Politics and Societies, 20(1): 126-151.

Gunn, Raymond. (year?). The Minds of Marginalized Black Men: Making Sense of Mobility, Opportunity, and Future Life Chances.

Gutmann, Matt. (1997). Trafficking in Men: The Anthropology of Masculinity. Annual Review of Anthropology, pp. 385-409.

Herzog, Hanna, and Taghreed Yahia-Younis (2007) Men’s Bargaining with Patriarchy: The Case of Primaries within Hamulas in Palestinian Arab Communities in Israel. Gender & Society, August, 21(4): 579-602.

Jeffrey, Craig, Roger Jeffery, and Patricia Jeffery. (2004). Degrees without Freedom: The Impact of Formal Education on Dalit Young Men in North India. Development and Change, Volume 35, Issue 5, Page 963-986, November.

Kama, Amit (2005). An Unrelenting Mental Press: Israeli Gay Men’s Ontological Duality and Its Discontent. Journal of Men’s Studies, Winter, Vol. 13, Iss. 2.

Kaplan, Danny. (2006). The Men We Loved: Male Friendship and Nationalism in Israeli Culture. New York: Berghahn Books.

Krishnaswamy, Revathy. (1998). Effeminism: The Economy of Colonial Desire. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.

Lee, Romeo B. (2004). Filipino men’s familial roles and domestic violence: implications and strategies for community-based intervention. Health and Social Care in the Community, Volume 12, Issue 5, pp. 422-429, September.

Lewis, Linden. (1998). Masculinity and the Dance of the Dragon: Reading Lovelace Discursively. (Caribbean Masculinity) Feminist Review, No. 59, Summer.

Matz, J. (2007). Masculinity Amalgamated: Colonialism, Homosexuality, and Forster’s Kipling. Journal of Modern Literature, 30(3): 31.

Pease, Bob, and Keith Pringle. (eds.). (2002). A Man’s World: Changing Men’s Practices in a Globalized World. Zed Books.

RamÌrez, Rafael L., VÌctor I. GarcÌa-Toro and Ineke Cunningham. (eds.). (2002). Caribbean Masculinities: Working Papers. San Juan, PR: University of Puerto Rico, CIEVS.

Reddock, Rhoda E. (ed.). (2004). Interrogating Caribbean Masculinities. Kingston, Jamaica: University of the West Indies Press.

Romero, R. T. (2006). “Ranging Foresters” and “Women-Like Men”: Physical Accomplishment, Spiritual Power, and Indian Masculinity in Early-Seventeenth-Century New England. Ethnohistory, 53(2): 281.

Sampath, N. M. (1993). An evaluation of the ‘creolisation’ of Trinidad East Indian adolescent masculinity. In: Yalvington, K. A. (ed.), Trinidad ethnicity, London, UK, Macmillan.

Synnott, Anthony. (2001). Men and masculinities. American Anthropologist, March, 103(1), pp. 212-217.

Young, Antonia. (2000). Women Who Become Men: Albanian Sworn Virgins. Oxford, UK: Berg.