Home › Books › Entitled: How Male Privilege Hurts Women
Entitled: How Male Privilege Hurts Women
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About This Book
An urgent exploration of men's entitlement and how it serves to police and punish women, from the acclaimed author of Down Girl. In this bold and stylish critique, Cornell philosopher Kate Manne offers a radical new framework for understanding misogyny. Ranging widely across the culture, from Harvey Weinstein and the Brett Kavanaugh hearings to "Cat Person" and the political misfortunes of Elizabeth Warren, Manne's book shows how privileged men's sense of entitlement—to sex, yes, but more insidiously to admiration, care, bodily autonomy, knowledge, and power—is a pervasive social problem with often devastating consequences. In clear, lucid prose, Manne argues that male entitlement can explain a wide array of phenomena, from mansplaining and the undertreatment of women's pain to mass shootings by incels and the seemingly intractable notion that women are "unelectable." Moreover, Manne implicates each of us in toxic masculinity: It's not just a product of a few bad actors; it's something we all perpetuate, conditioned as we are by the social and cultural mores of our time. The only way to combat it, she says, is to expose the flaws in our default modes of thought while enabling women to take up space, say their piece, and muster resistance to the entitled attitudes of the men around them. With wit and intellectual fierceness, Manne sheds new light on gender and power and offers a vision of a world in which women are just as entitled as men to our collective care and concern.
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Reviews
"This incisive feminist treatise is a must-read."
"Feelings of entitlement may be essential to misogyny — but Manne argues that they're essential to defeating misogyny, too."
"An effective text on how women are affected by the assumed privileges of men, and the structural forces that enforce and uphold those privileges."
"Those larger changes would require the creation of a political coalition that could bring together women with widely varying levels of what Manne calls 'valid' entitlement."
"the author's polemical case also takes a shortsighted view of sexual double standards, genuflecting before recent feminist scholarship and academic orthodoxies while ignoring landmarks like Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex and Shulamith Firestone's The Dialectic of Sex."
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