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Heart of Maleness

An Exploration

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In this timely, self-reflective essay, a groundbreaking sociologist and philosopher examines the underlying causes of gender inequality and how we can fight against it.
Following the shocking, infuriating accounts shared as part of the #MeToo movement, Raphaël Liogier felt compelled to apply his academic expertise to shed light on the roots of gender inequality and its many manifestations, including catcalling, workplace harassment, and rape, as well as the glass ceiling and the gender pay gap. In the brazenness of Donald Trump, who brags about groping women, in the hypocrisy of outspoken progressives whose private behavior belies their so-called feminist ideals, and even occasionally in the good intentions of men such as Liogier who strive to be allies, we can see the influence of a deep-seated fantasy of male dominance.
With candor and clarity, Liogier demonstrates that the archetypal Prince Charming and a monstrous predator such as Harvey Weinstein are two sides of the same coin—products of a worldview that not only places a man's desires above a woman's, but also doubts whether women are fundamentally capable of knowing what they want. Recent years have witnessed significant progress toward gender equality, from the ousting of prominent men accused of sexual misconduct to the unprecedented popularity of the 2019 Women's World Cup. Heart of Maleness maps out the crucial work still to be done, first and foremost addressing the core male fantasy about women's bodies and minds.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 7, 2019
      French philosopher Liogier makes his English-language debut with an incisive critique of the Western cultural construct of “maleness.” He traces ideas of virility and its “negative corollary,” femininity, to the archaic practice of “measuring a man’s status by the number of women he possesses,” and argues that in order to solve gender inequality society must break down the “fantasy” of male dominance. Classifying serial abuser Harvey Weinstein as an example of “Don Juanism” (the systemic denial of women’s free will and right to pleasure), Liogier calls on readers to assign a “transcendental value, unquestionable a priori” to a woman’s consent, rather than accepting the Hollywood stereotype that she can never fully express her own desires. He believes that the patriarchal system is in its “death throes,” and offers French president Emmanuel Macron’s marriage to a woman 25 years his senior as an example of a liberated relationship in which feminine and masculine identities are “transvalued,” rather than erased. Liogier doesn’t address how activism might help to enact the wholesale social changes he believes are necessary, and some philosophical concepts could be better defined. But as a call for men to reexamine the ways they’ve “been conditioned to view and desire women,” this short book achieves its goals.

    • Kirkus

      November 1, 2019
      A French philosopher and sociologist examines femininity as constructed by the dominant and destructive "Weinsteinian masculinity that still remains dominant." Liogier, who teaches philosophy in Paris, reflects on how "archaic [masculinity has] focused on the mastery of the [female] other while blinding [itself] with the fantasy of the transcendence of the [male] self." He writes from the perspective of a white male heterosexual disgusted by the actions of other white heterosexual men like Harvey Weinstein who is also aware of the misogyny embedded in how he has been "conditioned to view and desire women." The global #MeToo movement, he writes, was not simply an example of the mobilizing power of the internet, but a historic groundswell that signaled recognition of a "transcendental subjectivity" that transformed women from objects of male desire to subjects demanding equality before the law. Liogier then deconstructs the myth of "Prince Charming." Based on a 14th-century folktale about a princess raped in her sleep by a king, the myth suggests that rape is not only a "blessing," but the means by which the princess is "enabled to awaken to her true life" as a woman. Such stories are only reflections of a capitalist Western culture in which females have been denied the enjoyment of their own corporeality. Women are valuable only for the wealth, power, and/or status they bring to men. Such modern developments as the internet now allow females to not only express themselves en masse; they also permit women to undermine masculine control of their bodies as they pursue their own pleasure and self-empowerment. This new situation, writes the author, leaves heterosexual men forced to redefine their "ambitions as men, our fantasies as men, our behavior as men, our desires as men." While Liogier's work does not offer new insights into gender, it is still important for what it reveals about how modern gender movements have impacted the way respectful heterosexual men perceive themselves and their relationship to women. A brief but thoughtful, topical read.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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