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History of Feminism
In reply to the discussion: I like the term Mansplain woo Woo [View all]ismnotwasm
(42,493 posts)47. I think I posted this before-- the history of ' mansplaining
Rebecca Solnit is a decorated author and activist, but she may be best-known for the word she added to our lexicon: mansplaining. Mansplaining was born from a 2008 blog post in which Solnit wrote: Men explain things to me, and other women, whether or not they know what theyre talking about. Since then, mansplaining has taken the culturesphere by storm, getting named one of the New York Times words of the year and inspiring countless think pieces. Solnit has been writing elegant, sharp essays and books for more than two decades her latest book, also called Men Explain Things to Me, released today, is a collection of seven essays about this particular facet of the modern gender wars. On the whole her work spans a broad spectrum of subjects ranging from literature, art, philosophy, anti-militarism and the environment. It is feminist, frequently funny, unflinchingly honest and often scathing in its conclusions. In 2010, the Utne Reader named Solnit, who is the recipient of several literary awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship and a Lannan literary fellowship, one of 25 Visionaries Who are Changing Your World.
Tell me about writing that first essay from which the name of the book is taken, Men Explain Things to Me. As you mention in the book, it is a piece that continues, years after publication, to be shared and discussed.
Id been joking about writing it for years. Men explaining things to me had been happening my whole life. The infamous incident I described in which a man talked over me to explain a Very Important Book he thought I should read that it turns out I wrote happened five years earlier in 2003.
The term mansplaining has resonated with so many women. It shifted the cultural universe ever so slightly (in a good way). Did you expect this response?
You know, I had a wonderful conversation about a month ago with a young Ph.D. candidate at U.C. Berkeley. Ive been a little bit squeamish about the word mansplaining, because it can seem to imply that men are inherently flawed, rather than that some guys are a little over-privileged, arrogant and clueless. This young academic said to me, No, you dont understand! You need to recognize that until we had the word mainsplained, so many women had this awful experience and we didnt even have a language for it. Until we can name something, we cant share the experience, we cant describe it, we cant respond to it. I think that word has been extraordinarily valuable in helping women and men describe something that goes on all the time. She really changed my opinion. Its really useful. Ive always been interested in how much our problems come from not having the language, not having the framework to think and talk about and address the phenomenon around us.
Tell me about writing that first essay from which the name of the book is taken, Men Explain Things to Me. As you mention in the book, it is a piece that continues, years after publication, to be shared and discussed.
Id been joking about writing it for years. Men explaining things to me had been happening my whole life. The infamous incident I described in which a man talked over me to explain a Very Important Book he thought I should read that it turns out I wrote happened five years earlier in 2003.
The term mansplaining has resonated with so many women. It shifted the cultural universe ever so slightly (in a good way). Did you expect this response?
You know, I had a wonderful conversation about a month ago with a young Ph.D. candidate at U.C. Berkeley. Ive been a little bit squeamish about the word mansplaining, because it can seem to imply that men are inherently flawed, rather than that some guys are a little over-privileged, arrogant and clueless. This young academic said to me, No, you dont understand! You need to recognize that until we had the word mainsplained, so many women had this awful experience and we didnt even have a language for it. Until we can name something, we cant share the experience, we cant describe it, we cant respond to it. I think that word has been extraordinarily valuable in helping women and men describe something that goes on all the time. She really changed my opinion. Its really useful. Ive always been interested in how much our problems come from not having the language, not having the framework to think and talk about and address the phenomenon around us.
http://www.salon.com/2014/05/20/men_explain_things_to_me_the_author_behind_mansplaining_on_the_origin_of_her_famous_coinage/
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I think I "get" the idea of controlling the message, but I think it could backfire.
NYC_SKP
Jul 2014
#1
from my experience those who are offended by this have a history of being anti women
JI7
Jul 2014
#12
This, exactly. It's the same as those who howl in outrage about the term 'white privilege' nt
redqueen
Jul 2014
#41
Oh, and here I thought you meant that was a good term for some jerks: "Power Tools"
NYC_SKP
Jul 2014
#37
a more apt and fitting analogy is bill o'reilly, bundy, or the duck dynasty dude
noiretextatique
Jul 2014
#51
you know what, I understand that coming from you and I never use it either -
Tuesday Afternoon
Jul 2014
#50
I also like the term mansplain. It captures perfectly the patronizing tone a man might
Louisiana1976
Jul 2014
#52