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Legalizing Misandry: From Public Shame to Systemic Discrimination Against Men PDF

667 Pages·2006·3.98 MB·English
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LEGALIZING MISANDRY This page intentionally left blank Legalizing Misandry From Public Shame to Systemic Discrimination against Men PAUL NATHANSON and KATHERINE K. YOUNG McGill-Queen’s University Press Montreal & Kingston · London · Ithaca © McGill-Queen’s University Press 2006 isbn-13: 978-0-7735-2862-8 isbn-10: 0-7735-2862-8 Legal deposit first quarter 2006 Bibliothèque nationale du Québec Printed in Canada on acid-free paper This book has been published with the help of a grant from the Canadian Federation for the Humanities and Social Sciences, through the Aid to Scholarly Publications Programme, using funds provided by the Social Sci- ences and Humanities Research Council of Canada. McGill-Queen’s University Press acknowledges the support of the Canada Council for the Arts for our publishing program. We also acknowledge the financial support of the Government of Canada through the Book Publish- ing Industry Development Program (bpidp) for our publishing activities. Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication Nathanson, Paul, 1947– Legalizing misandry : from public shame to systematic discrimination against men / Paul Nathanson and Katherine K. Young. Includes index. isbn-13: 978-0-7735-2862-8 isbn-10: 0-7735-2862-8 1. Misandry – Canada. 2. Misandry – United States. 3. Sex discrimi- nation against men – Canada. 4. Sex discrimination against men – United States. I. Young, Katherine K., 1944– II. Title. hq1090.n367 2006 305.32′0971 c2005–902483–6 Typeset in 10/12Sabon with Frutiger display by True to Type Contents Acknowledgements vii Introduction ix part one men on trial: the court of public opinion 1 1 Children v. Demons: The McMartin and Other Witch Hunts 3 2 Wives v. Abusers: The Bobbitt Affair 21 3 Workers v. Harassers: The Hill-Thomas Debate 31 4 Martyrs v. Murderers: The Montreal Massacre 53 part two rights on trial: money matters 79 5 Women’s Rights v. Human Rights: The Case of Entitlements 81 6 Maternal Rights v. Paternal Rights: The Case of Children 125 part three sex on trial: from liberation to separation 157 7 Power v. Pleasure: The Case of Pornography/Prostitution 159 8 Separatists v. Integrationists: The Case of Sexual Harassment 193 9 Female Victims v. Male Victims: The Case of Violence against Women 223 vi Contents part four society on trial: from classroom to legislature 267 10 Ideological Feminism v. Scholarship 269 11 Misandry v. Equality 309 appendices 327 1 Responding to Our Critics: Spreading Misandry Revisited 329 2 Birth of the Bogeyman: One Subtext of Modern Witch Hunts 340 3 Misleading the Public: Statistics Abuse 347 4 Silencing men: The Trouble with Political Correctness 365 5 Respectable Porn: The Debate over Romance Novels 373 6 Bargaining at Beijing: United Nations or United Women 391 7 Paved with Entitlements: The Road to Caste 403 8 Here Come the Feds: Studies of Affirmative Action and Pay Equity 410 9 Dissing Dads: The Debate over Custody 415 10 Gynotopia: Feminism at Academic Conferences 439 11 AFront by Any Other Name: Ideology, Gender Studies, and Women’s Studies 465 12 What’s Sauce for the Goose: Double Standards in a Government Report 471 13 Take That! Comparative Victimology 478 Notes 493 Index 621 Acknowledgments We would like to thank the many people who helped make this book pos- sible. Some responded to our requests for legal and statistical information: Augustina J. Kposowa, Grant Brown, and Brian Jenkins. Christopher Gray read several chapters and offered his comments. Jane Aiken has granted us permission to publish some of her material. Nicolas Lambe and Tara McPhail helped us with our legal citations. Our editor, Ron Curtis, read the manuscript very carefully; he not only corrected typos but also provided many worthwhile editorial suggestions. Finally we are grateful to the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council for its financial support. This page intentionally left blank Introduction One sure sign of danger at any time and in any place is a segment of the population that society considers unworthy of attention. No wonder more boys than girls face the future with apathy and drop out of school.1Worse, far more young men than young women are committing suicide. Ditto for old men and old women.2 Males are not faring well at all in a society that is now focused explicitly on the needs and problems of females and is often hostile to the very possibility that males might have any distinct needs and problems of their own. Rapid social change and depression have been listed as causes of these problems, but the question is why these factors affect men, especially young men, much more than they do women. These are complex problems, to be sure, and have more than one expla- nation (as we will show in Transcending Misandry, the third volume of this trilogy; the first volume, Spreading Misandry, was published in 2001). Underlying many explanations, though, is a distinctly gynocentric world- view. Being woman-centred, by definition, gynocentrism ignores the needs and problems of men. (The irony is that it was originally adopted to cor- rect the biases of an androcentric, or man-centred, worldview.) And because gynocentrism now has both official status (in law) and quasi-offi- cial status (in institutional policies), its bias has become deeply embedded in public policy. That status has created and even institutionalized a new double standard, one that favours women instead of men and that, in turn, has created many additional problems: psychological, political, and – above all – moral ones. It is hard to know precisely how these problems affect boys and men personally, but it is worth noting that no large-scale study has ever been done to find out. It would be folly to ignore the warn- ing signs mentioned above, in our opinion, but that is precisely what has been happening. At least one bar association has seen fit to threaten male dissenters, con- cluding a report on women with a stern warning. Men, it says, will try to

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Lurid and sensationalized events such as the public response to Lorena Bobbitt after she cut off her abusive husband's penis, prurient fascination provoked by Anita Hill's allegations about Clarence Thomas, and the exploitation of the mass murder of fourteen women in Montreal have been processed thr
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