Thursday, 10 January 2013

Misandry - wiki




Misandry


From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Misandry (pron.: /mɪˈsændri/) is the hatred or dislike of men or boys. The word did not appear in most dictionaries until the second half of the 20th century. It was commonly seen as a neologism in the early 1970s.[1] Misandry was formed from Greek misos (μῖσος, "hatred") and anērandros (ἀνήρ,gen. ἀνδρός; "man"). Misandry is the antonym of philandry, the fondness, love, or admiration of men. The female counterpart of misandry is misogyny, the hatred or dislike of women.

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[edit]In literature

[edit]Ancient Greek literature

Classics professor Froma Zeitlin of Princeton University discussed misandry in her article titled "Patterns of Gender in Aeschylean Drama: Seven against Thebes and the Danaid Trilogy."[2] She writes:
The most significant point of contact, however, between Eteocles and the suppliant Danaids is, in fact, their extreme positions with regard to the opposite sex: the misogyny of Eteocles' outburst against all women of whatever variety (Se. 181-202) has its counterpart in the seeming misandry of the Danaids, who although opposed to their Egyptian cousins in particular (marriage with them is incestuous, they are violent men) often extend their objections to include the race of males as a whole and view their cause as a passionate contest between the sexes (cf. Su. 29, 393, 487, 818, 951).[2]

[edit]Literary criticism

In his book, Gender and Judaism: The Transformation of Tradition, Harry Brod, a Professor of Philosophy and Humanities in the Department of Philosophy and Religion at the University of Northern Iowa, writes:
In the introduction to The Great Comic Book Heroes, Jules Feiffer writes that this is Superman's joke on the rest of us. Clark is Superman's vision of what other men are really like. We are scared, incompetent, and powerless, particularly around women. Though Feiffer took the joke good-naturedly, a more cynical response would see here the Kryptonian's misanthropy, his misandry embodied in Clark and his misogyny in his wish that Lois be enamored of Clark (much like Oberon takes out hostility toward Titania by having her fall in love with an ass in Shakespeare's Midsummer-Night's Dream).[3]
Julie M. Thompson, a feminist author, connects misandry with envy of men, in particular "penis envy," a term coined by Sigmund Freud in 1908, in his theory of female sexual development.[4]

[edit]Comparisons with other forms of discrimination

In 1999, masculist writer Warren Farrell compared the dehumanizing stereotyping of men to the dehumanization of the Vietnamese people as "gooks."[5]
In the past quarter century, we exposed biases against other races and called it racism, and we exposed biases against women and called it sexism. Biases against men we call humor.
—Warren Farrell, Women Can't Hear What Men Don't Say
Religious Studies professors Paul Nathanson and Katherine Young made similar comparisons in their 2001, three-book series Beyond the Fall of Man,[6] which treats misandry as a form of prejudice and discrimination that has become institutionalized in North American society.
In the 2007 book International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinities, Marc A. Ouellette directly contrasted misandry and misogyny, arguing that "misandry lacks the systemic, transhistoric, institutionalized, and legislated antipathy of misogyny."[7] Anthropologist David D. Gilmore argues that while misogyny is a "near-universal phenomenon" there is no female equivalent to misogyny. He writes:
Man hating among women has no popular name because it has never (at least not until recently) achieved apotheosis as a social fact, that is, it has never been ratified into public, culturally recognized and approved institutions (...) As a cultural institution, misogyny therefore seems to stand alone as a gender-based phobia, unreciprocated.[8]
Gilmore also states that neologisms like misandry refer "not to the hatred of men as men, but to the hatred of men's traditional male role" and a "culture of machismo". Therefore, he argues, misandry is "different from the intensely ad feminam aspect of misogyny that targets women no matter what they believe or do".[8]

[edit]Instances

Academic Alice Echols, in her 1989 book Daring To Be Bad: Radical Feminism in America, 1967–1975, argued that radical feminist Valerie Solanas, best known for her attempted murder of Andy Warhol in 1968, displayed an extreme level of misandry compared to other radical feminists of the time in her tractThe SCUM Manifesto. Echols stated,
Solanas's unabashed misandry—especially her belief in men's biological inferiority—her endorsement of relationships between 'independent women,' and her dismissal of sex as 'the refuge of the mindless' contravened the sort of radical feminism which prevailed in most women's groups across the country.[9]
The text contains aspects of Freudian psychoanalytical theory: the biological accident, the incomplete sex and "penis envy" which became "pussy envy."[10][11] Solanas was later diagnosed withparanoid schizophrenia and depression; some observers think she was suffering from these illnesses at the time of her writing.[12][13][14]
Paul Nathanson and Katherine K. Young argued that "ideological feminism" has imposed misandry on culture.[15] Their 2001 book, Spreading Misandry, analyzed "pop cultural artifacts and productions from the 1990s" from movies to greeting cards for what they considered to be pervasive messages of hatred toward men. Legalizing Misandry (2005), the second in the series, gave similar attention to laws in North America.
In 2002, pundit Charlotte Hays wrote "that the anti-male philosophy of radical feminism has filtered into the culture at large is incontestable; indeed, this attitude has become so pervasive that we hardly notice it any longer".[16]
Sociologist Anthony Synnott argues that the reality of misandry is undeniable when one looks to cultural, academic, and media depictions of men. He states that "misandry is everywhere, culturally acceptable, even normative, largely invisible, taught directly and indirectly by men and women, blind to reality, very damaging and dangerous to men and women in different ways and de-humanizing."[17] He also criticizes modern scholarship on men as "dehumanizing" and lacking in awareness of statistical reality.

[edit]Wendy McElroy

Wendy McElroy, an individualist feminist,[18] wrote in 2001 that some feminists "have redefined the view of the movement of the opposite sex as "a hot anger toward men seems to have turned into a cold hatred."[19] She argued it was a misandrist position to consider men, as a class, to be irreformable or rapists. McElroy stated "a new ideology has come to the forefront... radical or gender, feminism," one that has "joined hands with [the] political correctness movement that condemns the panorama of western civilization as sexist and racist: the product of 'dead white males'."[20]

[edit]Criticism of use of the word "misandry"

In his 1997 book The Gender Knot: Unraveling Our Patriarchal Legacy, sociologist Allan G. Johnson stated that accusations of man-hating have been used to put down feminists and shift attention onto men in a way that reinforces male-centered culture.[21] Johnson said that the word misandry did not appear in dictionaries until recently[22] and that comparisons between misogyny and misandry are misguided because mainstream culture offers no comparable anti-male ideology. He says in his book that accusations of misandry work to discredit feminism because "people often confuse men as individuals with men as a dominant and privileged category of people."[21] He wrote that given the "reality of women's oppression, male privilege, and men's enforcement of both, it's hardly surprising that every woman should have moments where she resents or even hates 'men'."[21]

[edit]See also

[edit]References

  1. ^ Johnson, Allan G. (2005). The Gender Knot: Unraveling Our Patriarchal Legacy. Temple University Press. p. 267.ISBN 1-59213-383-5.
  2. a b Zeitlin, Froma I. (PDF). Patterns of Gender in Aeschylean Drama: Seven against Thebes and the Danaid Trilogy. Retrieved 2007-12-21. Princeton University, paper given at the Department of Classics, University of California, Berkeley
  3. ^ Gender and Judaism: The Transformation of Tradition, Harry Brod
  4. ^ Emphasis added. Julie M. Thompson, Mommy Queerest: Contemporary Rhetorics of Lesbian Maternal Identity, (Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, 2002).
  5. ^ Farrell, Warren (1999). Women Can't Hear What Men Don't Say. New York: Tarcher. ISBN 1-58542-061-1.
  6. ^ (Nathanson & Young 2001, pp. 4–6) "The same problem that long prevented mutual respect between Jews and Christians, the teaching of contempt, now prevents mutual respect between men and women."
  7. ^ Flood, Michael, ed. (2007-07-18). International Encyclopedia of Men and Masculinitieset al.. London; New York: Routledge. ISBN 0-415-33343-1.
  8. a b Gilmore, David G. "Misogyny: The Male Malady". Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2009, pp. 10-13, ISBN 978-0-8122-1770-4.
  9. ^ Echols, Nicole. "Daring to Be Bad: Radical Feminism in America, 1967-1975". Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1989, pp. 104-105, ISBN 978-0-8166-1786-9.
  10. ^ Castro, Ginette. "American Feminism: A Contemporary History". New York: New York University Press, 1990, p. 73, ISBN 978-0-8147-1435-5.
  11. ^ Smith, Patricia Juliana. "The Queer Sixties". New York: Routledge, 1999, p. 68, ISBN 978-0-415-92168-8.
  12. ^ Valerie Jean Solanas (1936-88) The Guardian
  13. ^ Bockris, Victor. Warhol: The Biography. Da Capo Press (2003) ISBN 0-306-81272-X
  14. ^ Harron and Minahan. I Shot Andy Warhol. Grove Press (1996) ISBN 0-8021-3491-2
  15. ^ (Nathanson & Young 2001, p. xiv) "[ideological feminism,] one form of feminism—one that has had a great deal of influence, whether directly or indirectly, on both popular culture and elite culture—is profoundly misandric".
  16. ^ Hays, Charlotte. 'The Worse Half.' National Review 11 March 2002.
  17. ^ Why Some People Have Issues With Men: Misandry, Psychology Today, October 6, 2010
  18. ^ The Independent Institute
  19. ^ (McElroy 2001, p. 5)
  20. ^ (McElroy 2001, pp. 4–6)
  21. a b c Johnson, Allan G. (2005). The Gender Knot: Unraveling Our Patriarchal LegacyTemple University Press. p. 107. ISBN 978-1-59213-383-3.
  22. ^ Johnson, Allan G. (2005). The Gender Knot: Unraveling Our Patriarchal Legacy. Temple University Press. p. 267.ISBN 978-1-59213-383-3.

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