Synopses & Reviews
A call to reconsider the place of boys in the family, schools, and community institutions that rob them of their inborn vitality and creativity
• Argues that boys have a unique free-spirit nature and that efforts to alter or suppress it lead to profound unhappiness, pathology, or startling compulsions
• Demands another approach to societal expectations, one that values and promotes the daring creativity of boys
Richard Hawley’s many years as headmaster of a boys’ school have convinced him that boys do indeed have a unique, intrinsic, and inalienable free-spirit nature. He sees deep flaws in the way we--as parents, educators, and community members--alter or suppress that true nature in order to turn boys into men that fit our societal template. Hawley argues that the “model man” in our society, while seemingly successful in his role, may yet be unhappy in his life. The very elements that we strip away from a boy’s natural tendencies are the sources of spirituality and vitality that can give his life both meaning and satisfaction. Without these, he is lost to his essential nature.
A new approach is needed, says Hawley, and he goes to the roots of Western theology and philosophy to locate what has gone wrong and how those consequences might be addressed. He sounds the clarion call to unleash, promote, and celebrate the seemingly dangerous pursuits that reflect the creativity and daring nature of boys. Fantasy and imagination must trump cognition and problem solving. We must not hold our boys back with our fears of failure but give them the tools and support they need to create wings good enough to fly wherever they wish to go.
Review
"Beyond the Icarus Factor is a call to reconsider the place of boys in the family, schools, and community institutions that rob them of their inborn vitality and resourcefulness. . . . What happens to our boys when they're still boys is critical to our future. I hope you read this book."
Review
"Hawley details the current state on the battlefield with numerous case histories and examples. He draws, too, from psychology, philosophy, poetry, and literature. He makes us feel the essence of puer-spirit as both a wonder and a tragedy. . . . I would recommend this book to those alarmed adults who suspect the problem of boys is one society created."
Review
"Beyond the Icarus Factor is a call to reconsider the place of boys in the family, schools, and community institutions that rob them of their inborn vitality and resourcefulness. . . . What happens to our boys when they're still boys is critical to our future. I hope you read this book." < b=""> Chiwah <> , < i=""> The Light Connection <> , April 08
Review
"Hawley details the current state on the battlefield with numerous case histories and examples. He draws, too, from psychology, philosophy, poetry, and literature. He makes us feel the essence of puer-spirit as both a wonder and a tragedy. . . . I would recommend this book to those alarmed adults who suspect the problem of boys is one society created." < b=""> Bruce Bibee <> , < i=""> Alaska Wellness <> , Vol. 13, No. 4, Jul/Aug 08
Synopsis
Boys have a unique free-spirit nature, and societal efforts to alter or suppress it leads to profound unhappiness, pathology, or startling compulsions. A new approach to raising boys is needed, one that nurtures their free spirit, spirituality, creativity and vitality.
About the Author
Richard Hawley, Ph.D., was for thirty-seven years a teacher, counselor, coach, and then headmaster of University School, a college preparatory school in Cleveland, Ohio. He is the founding president of the International Boys’ Schools Coalition and has lectured widely on youth and school-related issues in the United States, Canada, Great Britain, and Australia. The author of sixteen books, including The Headmaster’s Papers and Boys Will Be Men: Masculinity in Troubled Times, he lives in Vermont.
Table of Contents
Prologue 1 The Experience of Boys
2 The Figure of Icarus
3 The Exile of Daedalus and the Dawn of Modern Consciousness
4 Icarus Embodied: The Puer Spirit in Real Lives
5 Icarus in the Modern World: The Case of Antoine de Saint-Exupéry
6 Icarus Observed from the Ground
7 Icarus and the Golden World
8 Beyond Broken Boys: Heeding the Taunts of Perdix
Notes
Bibliography
Index