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by John Ibson (Author), Steve Harrison (Afterword by)
A photo may capture a moment in cultural time--literally mirroring beliefs, assumptions, conventions, and notions of behaviors acceptable and scorned. The 385 photographs in this book are just such mirrors. Two decades ago, John Ibson, a historian of masculinity's history in the United States and of the variety of male relationships, used that approach to photography to examine shifting meanings of American manhood in his influential book Picturing Men: A Century of Male Relationships in Everyday American Photography.
Now, in The Pleasure of His Company, John Ibson opens his vast collection of everyday photographs of males together once again. Ibson believes these photos, all published here for the first time, take us to a world of unselfconscious affection among American men, a world largely lost today. It is a world, he maintains, whose loss contributed to the toxic masculinity so much lamented today.
Affection abounds in these photographs, yet Ibson believes it is impossible to know for certain whether most of the males pictured were sexually attracted to each other. Some probably were, others probably not. What we can know for sure is that they showed and savored the pleasure of each other's company.
Author Biography
An award-winning teacher and a prominent scholar of American sexuality and masculinity, John Ibson is a professor emeritus of American studies at California State University, Fullerton, his academic home throughout a career of nearly fifty years. Among his books are Picturing Men: A Century of Male Relationships in Everyday American Photography (2006) and The Mourning After: Loss and Longing among Midcentury American Men (2018). He lives in Claremont, California, with his husband, Steve Harrison, and their dachshund, Max.