
@article{ref1,
title="Structural Health and the Politics of African American Masculinity",
journal="American journal of men's health",
year="2013",
author="Metzl, Jonathan Michel",
volume="7",
number="4 Suppl",
pages="68S-72S",
abstract="African American men's health is often discussed through the language of imperatives. African American men suffer disproportionately from certain ill-health outcomes, such logic often implies because they live harder and drive faster, or because they fail to visit physicians. These statements may well be true in certain settings. But connections between African American men and health are far more complicated than they may once have seemed. We now recognize that notions of &quot;health&quot; attained by individual choice-embedded in the notion that African American men should visit doctors or engage in fewer risky behaviors-are at times in tension with larger cultural, economic, and political notions of &quot;health.&quot; This is because men's health, in general, and black men's health, in particular, is a desired state, but it is also a prescribed state that tells us as much about American social hierarchies and political economies as it does about individual behaviors.<p /><p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1557-9883",
doi="10.1177/1557988313486512",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1557988313486512"
}