Melting into the Margins intervenes in the academic and media debate about normality: the
white nuclear family and white middle class men. This thesis traces the emergence of the
contemporary discourse which suggests that the normal is being displaced into the margins,
away from the centre, 'disproved' as a lived condition and shown to be ‘untrue’ as an
ideological concept and examines the implications and effects of this discourse. A new
discourse of the normal is deemed necessary by the academic disciplines of masculinity and
family studies because they argue that we live in a new age of tolerance, equality, meritocracy
and plurality. The disciplines of masculinity and family studies that this thesis critiques argue
that in this new age and new society the ‘old’ idea of a white, middle class, gendered,
heterosexual normality is becoming unworkable and obsolete. This thesis examines the new
discourse itself and its archive (Foucault, 1972), in the form of contemporary representations of
white men and the white, middle class, heterosexual nuclear family. Beginning with the idea
that white men were traditionally and historically invisible this thesis argues that this was never
so and that the centre of our society has always been visible. This thesis offers a critique of the
current project from the academy and from the media that proposes to ‘make-the-centre-visible’
in order to 'prove' that normality does not exist. I argue that this project, which exposes failure,
doubt and abnormality beneath the surface appearance of the normal is a project set up by white
middle class people for white middle class people. The new project, its discourse and archive
attempt to demonstrate that no-one has any extra-ordinary power in our society because of race,
gender or class. This thesis argues that this demonstration evidenced in the academy and the
media takes an extreme anti-essentialist view point that eventually denies that there are any
limits to choice or opportunity. The denial of an excluding and exclusionary normal predicated
on concepts of difference suggests a pure meritocracy, which helps to justify the continuing
domination of white men. The aim of Melting into the Margins is to offer a critique of the
current discourse of normality and an examination of its archive and to offer ways forward that
can truly fulfil the stated objectives of masculinity and family studies: the deconstruction of the
exclusive, excluding white, middle class centre of British society - the normal.
Date of Award | 2004 |
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Original language | English |
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Awarding Institution | |
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MELTING INTO THE MARGINS: THE DIS-APPEARANCE OF NORMALITY
HEHOLT, R. M. (Author). 2004
Student thesis: PhD