
A bold work of philosophy that argues for a paradigm shift about gender: that it exists and functions as a system that privileges "real men" over othersThe resurgence of "Smash the Patriarchy!" following the election of Donald Trump and the rise of #MeToo was not a throwback to a bygone political slogan. It was a cry of frustration from millions who sense that there is a common culprit behind their experiences of gender-based violence and exploitation. But who or what is that culprit? In Real Men on Top, philosopher Robin Dembroff asks you to reconsider everything you believe about gender and patriarchy.Gender, Dembroff argues, is not being a man or a woman. Even more fundamentally, gender is gendering: the process of evaluating and treating people based on cultural ideals of what men and women should be. Patriarchy, they say, is the institutionalized system of gendering. Against the accepted idea that patriarchy privileges men over women, Dembroff argues that patriarchy elevates people who resemble culture's most powerful ideals of manhood--ideals that reflect men who are white, straight, wealthy, and not disabled. To put it simply, patriarchy puts real men on top.
This book investigates the core question of how patriarchy functions as an institutionalized system of gendering that privileges specific ideals of manhood over others. Robin Dembroff, an assistant professor of philosophy at Yale University, utilizes their expertise in feminist and LGBTQ philosophy to challenge conventional understandings of gender. By analyzing the process of 'gendering'—the evaluation and treatment of individuals based on cultural ideals—Dembroff argues that patriarchy specifically elevates those who embody the traits of white, straight, wealthy, and non-disabled men.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this work as a significant contribution to contemporary feminist philosophy, particularly for its rigorous re-examination of gender systems. Readers often note that the prose is intellectually dense, making it a challenging but rewarding text for those interested in the intersection of philosophy and social justice.
Page Count:
288
Publication Date:
1900-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190052562
ISBN-13:
9780190052560
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