Debut novelist (and college professor) James Hornor started with a story of adventure, love and crime, set in Zimbabwe, Kenya and Bombay (now Mumbai.) But as he wrote VICTORIA FALLS, he discovered what he really wanted to explore was a particular strain of American masculinity - what forms it, what are its strengths and weaknesses, and how can a man change himself? In a time when "toxic masculinity" is popping up in news stories everywhere, Jim has some interesting things to say.
As
a college professor and a lifetime educator, I often remind my
students that the model for our democracy and our democratic values
emanate from Greek culture, specifically Athens. Athenians valued
family and community, prized the intellect and related rhetorical
skills, and were cognizant of an afterlife where their core values
would live on. The concept of courage for a young male Athenian
included physical prowess as well as an intrinsic appreciation for
human justice and the rights of an individual. The arts thrived in
ancient Athens as individual self-expression and an aesthetic
awareness were both encouraged and rewarded.
Young
men in Athens were inculcated with those values, and the concept of
manhood included assuming responsibility for family and for a just
society. Becoming a skillful rhetorician (from the Greek word
rhetorikos)
was associated with becoming a complete human being. Rhetorical
acumen in government discourse or a court of law was more highly
prized than even military conquest. Mastering the art of rhetoric was
a confirmation of an individual’s place in the body politic which
included ongoing discussions on social justice and the moral
responsibility of government. These markers of Athenian manhood were
well defined and unlike Spartan culture, they were multi-dimensional
eclipsing the monolithic Spartan ideal of bravery in battle as the
primary affirmation of gender identity.



In
our current political climate the idea of defining “true manhood”
as including kindness and empathy suddenly seems countercultural. To
champion those values is regarded by some as even un-American. What
it means to be a man or a woman— what it means to be human—have
been the touchstones of democratic societies since the fifth century
B.C. Like the Athenians, we can choose to be role models of a
personhood that values inclusion, social justice, and a respect for
social and political discourse, or we can acquiesce to a distortion
of that model where moral relativity and political expediency become
the acceptable markers of our national character.
JULIA: Dear readers, are there traits you associate with 'manhood', for good or ill? How would you define masculinity in the US? How would you like to see it changed? Join us in the comments, and you'll have a chance to win a copy of VICTORIA FALLS!
James Hornor teaches English at Southern Maine Community College where he
also directs the Mid-Coast SMCC Writing Center. His novel, Victoria Falls,
(Green Writers Press) was published in January, 2019. You can read more on Jim and his work at his website, VictoriaFalls.com