Welcome to Religious Forums, a friendly forum to discuss all religions in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to the following site features:We hope to see you as a part of our community soon!
"We" don't assign duties to "them" - equal partners negotiate duties.Equal but how do we assign various duties to them?
"feminists" are not a single monolithic bloc.[dam DS got their first!] Ultimately, the only way to solve Sexism is by making men "partners", rather than treating them as either oppressors or competitors.
sexism is not genetic and so although it is cliche, "we can change!". however, it is a very different kind of partnership than most people have in mind and so far as I know, there is no clear or public role for feminist men or even in the literature.
So if currently Feminism has no role for men, how can Men be viewed as partners?
Your answer seems to be stated as the way you want it to be, rather than how it is currently.
So if currently Feminism has no role for men, how can Men be viewed as partners?
I don't think that is so. Or else those in power would always be obligated to keep it or lose face, whatever the reason they had. I don't like that philosophy. Too close to "might makes right" and all the troubles that has caused. The wise know that it removes nothing from them for another to prosper, unless it was from their loss that they prospered. And I respect a man who has the bravery to face an equal world more than I respect the hurt feelings of one who is afraid of it.my understanding of feminism is limited and the "man hating feminist" is a common sterotype (which I assume your poll and OP were intending to address). to the best of my knowledge, that is not the reality.
quintessence hit the nail on the head. The problem is that "gender roles" still reflect partiarchial norms, with men being dominant and women submissive. whilst women have become more assertive because of feminism, it is unclear how men can respond to the loss of their patriarchial social dominance without it affecting self-esteem or self-worth. masculinity is a psychological, sexual as well as a cultural pattern, so it will probably take a period of experimentation before we will find a sense of masculinity that is not patriarchial and is based on gender equality.
I don't think that is so. Or else those in power would always be obligated to keep it or lose face, whatever the reason they had. I don't like that philosophy. Too close to "might makes right" and all the troubles that has caused. The wise know that it removes nothing from them for another to prosper, unless it was from their loss that they prospered. And I respect a man who has the bravery to face an equal world more than I respect the hurt feelings of one who is afraid of it.
"We" were already won over. A century ago. That there is lingering sexism is not surprising, but I do not think it will be solved by coddling the precious feelings of the worst offenders. They should be taught what being a decent human being is, and from an early age. The condition has never changed, only the shape of the challenge.I think you have to take both into the equation. men have to be won over to the idea of feminism as being in their interests and to their benifit. this is why the "man-hating" sterotype is so common as the sexual revolution challanged traditional understanding of masculinity. the problem is that these represent deep cultural changes where men come to accept women as equals rather than feeling feminism as an imposition or even artificial. your right to say that it should be a way for men to prosper and therefore develop a new sense of masculinity (perhaps without the mental health issues related to current expectations of male stocism).
Depends if you mean 1st, 2nd or insane 3rd Wave Feminism.