Description
Queering the Subversive Stitch is the first book to unpick the construction of masculinity through an analysis of how and why men engage with needlework.
About the Author
Joseph McBrinn is Reader in Art & Design History at Belfast School of Art, Ulster University in Belfast, Northern Ireland.
Reviews
This book pricks your creative imagination. It will enable you to unpick and weave the history of men's needlework and it will encourage you to pay a little more attention to those queer and subversive stitches. * Textile: Cloth and Culture *
A comprehensive study of men who turned to needlework ... [McBrinn's] present-day analyses are the liveliest, unpicking long-held notions of femininity and masculinity within the field of cultural production. * Elephant Magazine *
An insightful, humorous, yet poignant and empathetic exploration of the history of men in the field of embroidery. * Book Threads *
McBrinn's book marks an urgent intervention in the field of craft studies and it will be an essential text for those interested in the history of needlework and masculinity ... it will also become an important starting point for scholars looking to explore much wider, more diverse and inclusive approaches to investigations of queerness and craft in the future. * Art History *
I devoured this in one sitting ... McBrinn has drawn together such a readable history of this hitherto overlooked subject, which not only demands to be recognised alongside Rozsika Parker's, but prompts fresh discourse on men's history in needlework. * Embroidery *
[A] thoughtfully fluid theorization of masculinity, homosexuality and subcultures, as well as class and race, into a nuanced analysis grounded in fascinating textual and visual primary sources. * Journal of Design History *
Joseph McBrinn adds immeasurably to [needlework] literature through an unprecedented focus on men who sew. His richly researched and engagingly written narrative shows how various formations of modern masculinity have found expression through this medium. Queering the Subversive Stitch is at once a major scholarly contribution and a moving story about men's lives. * Glenn Adamson, Yale Center for British Art, USA *
But for the fact I couldn't put this book down, I would have taken up a needle and thread and started sewing. McBrinn takes us on an astonishing journey through the needlepoint and embroidery of nineteenth century sailors, Hollywood film idols, trade unionists and those in mourning at the height of the AIDS pandemic. Over 80 images show us men at work with their needles on deck, at home, in groups and in public; they illustrate the gamut of that work - from the floral and religious to the activist and tenderly homoerotic. This is very far from a niche history - it stiches together countercultures and elites, histories of masculinity and sexuality, and queer and gender theory. And McBrinn does this deftly - developing sophisticated, incisive arguments about the history, status and meaning of men sewing with wit and an enviable light touch. * Matt Cook, Birkbeck, University of London, UK *
Book Information
ISBN 9781472578044
Author Joseph McBrinn
Format Paperback
Page Count 272
Imprint Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Weight(grams) 468g