Individual women may feel they are acting independently when dyeing their greys and getting cosmetic surgery or botox, but in doing so, they put pressure on other women to participate in these practices as well.
Even ‘good men’ continue to defend men’s right to access female bodies, using debunked evolutionary theory.
Lately, powerful women have been getting a lot of bad press. But not all women use their power for evil or to grab non-consenting penises. Man Who Has It All interviews some of these Good Women to find out how they learned to see men as human.
The real message of Blade Runner 2049 is that objectification can only lead to dehumanization.
We have to let go of a comforting illusion — that there is some bright line between men who rape and men who don’t rape, between the bad guys and the good guys.
“Exclusion” has become a bad word, of late, but is not inherently so.
Murray Edwards College, one of Cambridge’s women-only colleges, has decided to open admissions to any student who “at the point of application identifies as a woman.”
Julie Bindel’s new book offers the most comprehensive analysis of the politics of the sex trade yet.
Men don’t rape because they don’t think consent is “sexy” enough, they rape because they think they will get away with it.
If elected officials are participating in sexual abuse, we shouldn’t be joking about it.
Jennie Hodgers was not a man, she was a brave woman, fighting to escape restrictive gender roles.
‘Get Out’ makes white people feel good and plays into classic sexist tropes about masculinity.
It’s Ancient Greece all over again.
Debates in which people are condemned for thinking critically are unlikely to lead to responsible public policy.
Jen Izaakson reviews Angela Nagle’s new book, “Kill All Normies.”