Men Explain Things to Me
Image of the book jacket cover | |
Author | Rebecca Solnit |
---|---|
Illustrator | Ana Teresa Fernandez |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Subject | Feminist Theory, Women's rights, Media culture, Media studies |
Genre | Nonfiction |
Published | May 2014 (Haymarket Books) |
Media type | |
Pages | 130 |
ISBN | 9781608463862 |
Text | Men Explain Things to Me at the book publisher's website |
Men Explain Things To Me is a 2014 book by Rebecca Solnit, published by Haymarket Books. The book is a collection of seven essays and "has become a touchstone of the feminist movement."[1] The main essay in the book was cited in The New Republic as the piece that "launched the term mansplaining."[2]
Contents
- 1 Summary
- 1.1 Men Explain Things to Me (2008)
- 1.2 The Longest War (2013)
- 1.3 Worlds Collide in a Luxury Suite: Some Thoughts on the IMF, Global Injustice, and a Stranger on a Train (2011)
- 1.4 In Praise of the Threat: What Marriage Equality Really Means (2013)
- 1.5 Grandmother Spider (2014)
- 1.6 Woolf’s Darkness: Embracing the Inexplicable (2009)
- 1.7 Pandora’s Box and the Volunteer Police Force (2014)
- 2 Reception
- 3 References
- 4 External links
Summary
Each chapter is a separate essay from varying years that sum to a glimpse in the world of women under patriarchy and its reflection on the world.
Men Explain Things to Me (2008)
The eponymous essay of this book focuses entirely on the silencing of women, specifically the idea that men seemingly believe that no matter what a woman says they always know better. This phenomenon would later come to be called mansplaining, but in this essay Solnit describes how the silencing of female voices is an infringement on female liberty and is in fact an abuse of power. With an absence of credibility to female voices in the male mind issues like violent death, abuse, harassment, and rape are often discounted. In this way, she argues, female silencing is a dangerous phenomenon.
The Longest War (2013)
This essay focuses on the violence against women, specifically that women are more likely to be murdered by their husbands, abused, raped and generally injured by males. Solnit describes how the online community also facilitates this violent environment and focus on the rape and death of Jyoti Singh in New Delhi as very public examples of what women face over all in their lives.
Worlds Collide in a Luxury Suite: Some Thoughts on the IMF, Global Injustice, and a Stranger on a Train (2011)
This essay is in response to the rape of Nafissatou Diallo by former IMF president Dominique Strauss-Kahn. In this she reflects on how the IMF takes advantage of formerly colonized nations much as the world rapes and takes advantage of women from less fortunate positions, equating the world with women and the IMF with men from their positions of power.
In Praise of the Threat: What Marriage Equality Really Means (2013)
Solnit poses the idea in this essay that the backlash to marriage equality by proponents of tradition marriage comes from a place of ideological misogyny. Her theory is that since same sex marriages no longer operated in the confines of traditional gender roles, they did represent a threat to tradition marriage as they were unions between equals. In that frame of thought, it is so ingrained that woman must be subservient to men that marriage equality would mean the ideological emancipation of women in marriages if they were forced to be considered equals. So she is in praise of the perceived threat to traditional marriages same sex marriages pose because they demand equality in partnership, something women haven’t visibly had.
Grandmother Spider (2014)
Examining the symbolic annihilation of women over the course of history and under the law. Solnit describes how the disappearance of women is akin to helping to create the web of the world but never be caught in it. Specifically mentioned are English marriage laws where women are their husbands' property in the eyes of the law, family trees that contain only men and how the confinement of women to households adds to the erasure in texts of females overall.
Woolf’s Darkness: Embracing the Inexplicable (2009)
This essay focuses on writer Virginia Woolf’s influence and that of her quote “The future is dark, which is the best thing the future can be, I think.” Flowing around the idea of an uncertain future, the essay reflects how future prospects can be murky. But within those murky prospects lies untold limitless and fluid possibilities that should be embraced instead of feared as uncertainty sometimes is.
Pandora’s Box and the Volunteer Police Force (2014)
The final essay is a combination of a warning and a call to arms. Solnit writes that the fight for women’s rights is not yet over and points to the ‘volunteer police force’ of people who use rape culture, especially online, to keep women in their place for fear of retribution is the next step. Pandora’s box is a metaphor for the ideas of equality, as in that once the spirits, i.e. women, were out of their original box it looked like a coffin, and that ideas can’t be killed.
Reception
Helen Lewis of the New Statesman wrote, "I finished this book and immediately wanted to buy all the author’s other works. In future, I would like Rebecca Solnit to Explain Things to Me."[3] Kate Tuttle of The Boston Globe wrote that it "hums with power and wit".[4] Haley Mlotek of the National Post called it "a tool that we all need in order to find something that was almost lost."[5] Christine Sismondo of The Toronto Star called mansplaining a civil rights issue and wrote that "[Solnit is] the perfect person to explain it to you."[6] Soraya Chemaly of Salon wrote, "It is feminist, frequently funny, unflinchingly honest and often scathing in its conclusions."[7] Katie Moore of the Utne Reader wrote, "At 124 pages, this collection is both an easy read and a difficult one. Easy because Solnit's writing is so eloquently full of both grace and fury—not something many writers can pull off; difficult because of the storm of appalling facts."[8] Kirkus Reviews described it as "slim in scope, but yet another good book by Solnit."[9]
References
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External links
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