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John Berryman and the buried women —Ted Hughes and the goddess of complete being —Able semen and the penile canon: Derek Walcott’s ‘adamic utterance’ —Sons of mother Ireland: Seamus Heaney and Paul Muldoon — ‘Insofar as they are embodiments of the patriarchal idea’: women representing men —The politics of camp: Frank O’Hara and John Ashbery —Creeps and bastards: C.K. Williams as voyeur. Haggerty, G. E. (1999). Men in love: masculinity and sexuality in the eighteenth century. Between men—between women. New York: ColumbiaUniversity Press.

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1. Corrigibly Plural? Masculinity in Life and Literature / John Wilson Foster.
2. ‘You’re dying for me’: Representations of Masculinity in Contemporary Northern Irish Popular Women’s Fiction / Maeve Davey.
3. Belfast Drag: The Performance of Gender Disidentification in Northern Ireland / Niall Rea.
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5. Exploring Masculinity: Proximity, Intimacy and Chicken / Ed Madden.
6. The Negotiation and Consumption of Mediated Masculinities in the Artistry of the Male Self / Deirdre Duffy.
7. Masculinity in Crisis: The Construction of Irish Masculinities in Willie Doherty’s Non Specific Threat / Kate Antosik Parsons.
8. ‘They were the men who licked the IRA until they squealed’: Blueshirt Masculine Identity 1932–36 119 / Dale Montgomery.
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10. ‘Who May Tell The Tale Of The Old Man?’: Beckett, Men and Memory / Kathryn White.
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