Male Homosociality in Mario Puzo'sThe Godfather
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Department of English
Abstract
The research, in its careful and meticulous illustration, attempts to show whether the
text holds enough evidences to support the assumed hypothesis. The text is particularly loud
when it comes to the issue of male homosociality and masculinity as a response to the crisis
in masculinity in the wake of growing feminist movements, changing gender roles and
capitalistic bent of western social order. The novel, in its careful portrayal of all-dominant
male characters and depiction of crime world, looks like a prototype of a masculine text. On
the one hand, there are macho men and on the other there are submissive and rather
insignificant female characters in the novel. While the whole plot builds in telling the tales of
masculine virtues and sometimes vices, women in the novel have been restricted to the
insignificant and petty domestic boundaries. There is a homosocial desire in every male and
this male bonding helps them (re) assert their masculinity which the present study assumes to
be in crisis. The traditional notion of masculinity and the institution of patriarchy that
endorsed it lost its authoritative tone with the turn of century as times were changing fast,
thanks to the ever-evolving technology, ever-contingent ideologies and ever-new time. While
womenor the females were questioning feminity they were crossing over the gendered lines
of history as well and often charting into new territories that often left their male counterparts
confused. The Godfather, in its depiction of male fraternity and in itsnarration of a tale of a
charismatic patriarch has addressed to this male anxiety of being cornered.
