Abstract

Based on a case study of Israeli men's friendships, this arti cle examines the inter-relations between the experience of male rela tionships in everyday life and established representations of fraternal friendship. We delineate a script for male bonding that echoes ancient epics of heroism. This script holds a mythic structure for making sense of friendship in everyday life and places male relatedness under the spectral ideal of death. Whereas various male-to-male arenas present diverse and often displaced expressions of male affection, we con tend that sites of commemoration present a unique instance in which desire between men is publicly declared and legitimized. The collec tive rituals for the dead hero-friends serve as a mask that transforms a repudiated personal sentiment into a national genre of relatedness. We interpret fraternal friendship as a form of private/public identifica tion/desire whereby the citizen brother becomes, via collective rituals of commemoration, the desired brother.

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