"Despite its somber topic, Kate Manne''s Down Girl made me very happy, exhilarated indeed by its insight, analytical clarity, and committed engagement with a major issue of justice. I''ve been thinking and teaching about sexism and misogyny for a long time, but this book opened up fresh perspectives, for example in its convincing distinction between sexism as a set of beliefs and misogyny as an enforcement strategy. Each thoughtful person will have herown sense of where to locate the root of injustice to women, but Manne''s cogent argument that misogyny is primarily about the demand that women give support, service, and care is surely at least one big part ofthe story of our turbulent times." -- Martha C. Nussbaum, School of Law and Department of Philosophy, University of Chicago"Persuasively defining ''misogyny'' as hostile, demeaning, shaming, and punitive treatment of women, Down Girl brings out the misogynist logic of contemporary culture with wit and urgency. In this book ''misogyny'' emerges as the law enforcement branch of patriarchy, and thus as a concept that fully deserves a place alongside ''patriarchy'' and ''sexism'' as a fundamental tool for feminist analysis. Combining conceptual clarity with passionate commitment,Down Girl is indispensable reading for anyone who wishes to understand the ugly strand of hostility to women that has surfaced in recent years in our so-called advanced Western societies." -- Toril Moi, DukeUniversity"Kate Manne''s brilliant Down Girl is a welcome antidote to the view that philosophy is--or should be--detached and otherworldly.
In it, philosophy meets reality and the stakes are nothing less than life and death. Drawing on literature, television, film, social media, current events, and scientific research, Manne''s unflinching and bracingly original account defines misogyny in terms of what it does: it polices and punishes women for not fulfillingtheir time-honored role of catering to men''s needs and desires. Among its many other virtues, her analysis explains why, even as women are achieving greater equality, misogyny''s stranglehold doesn''t show signs ofloosening anytime soon. A must-read for all who struggle to make sense of contemporary culture and politics." -- Susan J. Brison, Dartmouth College"Kate Manne has written a deeply moving and powerful book. It is politically engaged philosophical analysis at its best." -- Sarah Song, University of California, Berkeley"Manne''s important new book deploys the tools of analytic moral philosophy to construct an arresting account of the logic of misogyny.
It is sure to become a key reference point for future discussions of this vital, but hitherto sadly neglected, topic." -- John Tasioulas, King''s College London"Manne offers us a deep, insightful, and thought-provoking --if depressing-- account of misogyny in America. This is a path-breaking book. It couldn''t come at a more auspicious time." -- Ruth Chang, Rutgers University"Manne''s Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny is excruciatingly well-timed, providing a theoretical framework for a phenomenon baring itself before us, perverse and pervasive. Down Girl reminds us that while revealing individual misogynists is hard, uprooting misogyny is much harder." -- Carlos Lozada, The Washington Post"Manne brings a fresh analysis to our assumed understanding of misogyny and the related term sexism. As a feminist and moral philosopher.
not a single book or article-length treatment [in the field] had been devoted to unpacking what it is and how it works. Historians, pay attention. Manne has stepped up to fill this gap. Manne as a feminist philosopher breaks new ground in a field that is in need of new perspectives.Having fought for recognition for thelegitimacy of their method, feminist philosophers are firmly committed to excavating the political, epistemological, and moral aspects of gender relations. Down Girl should encourage historians whotrace changes in the meaning and the context of language to revisit some of the old standby terms of feminism." -- Lilian Calles Barger, Society for US Intellectual History"Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny by feminist philosopher Kate Manne. argues that misogyny pits women against each other: the good wife vs.
"feminazis." At a time when high-profile sexual predators have been exposed, I can''t imagine a more relevant read." -- Carrie Tirado Bramen, Times Higher Education"Kate Manne''s Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny provides an important and compelling analysis of a phenomenon that''s everywhere. Out of Manne''s thoughtful analysis, of not just much-debated high-profile events but also everyday experiences, emerge insight after insight into the what, why, when, and how of misogyny. Manne also gifts us a marvelous neologism to capture the exculpatory and even empathic attitudes sometimes expressed towards misogynisticmen: "himpathy." -- Cordelia Fine, The Big Issue"This new book from Kate Manne, a professor of philosophy at Cornell University, makes a compelling argument for treating misogyny as a culture-wide system, not just a matter of individual bigotry." -- Max Fisher and Amanda Taub, The New York Times'' The Interpreter Newsletter"It is difficult to imagine a more timely moment for Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny. Manne is a professor of philosophy at Cornell University, and she uses the abstract tools of her discipline to parse current events.
Her guiding question is as troubling as it is straightforward-to quote the comedian John Oliver: "Why is misogyny still a thing?" Within the parameters that Down Girl sets for itself, the account of misogyny it provides iscompelling." -- Moira Weigel, The Guardian"Cornell University philosophy professor Kate Manne is on a mission to define "misogyny." While we''re culturally familiar with sexism, Manne argues in her forthcoming book Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny that misogyny has been woefully conflated with sexism though they have different uses. Misogyny, in Manne''s estimation, is about "controlling, policing, punishing, and exiling the ''bad'' women who challenge male dominance." Through the lens of the 2016election as well as the 2014 Isla Vista killings, the case of serial rapist Daniel Holtzclaw, Rush Limbaugh''s "slut" rant against Sandra Fluke, and other news events, Manne outlines the danger of misogyny, andexplains how we can collectively resist it." -- Evette Dionne, Bitch Magazine"Down Girl is a must-read and should be in every feminist''s library.[L]ong after reading it, I''ve found myself going back to it, quoting from it and rereading sections. Her analogies used to explain misogyny''s many forms, provide much needed clarity; Manne also parses the difference between sexism vs.
misogyny. In my opinion Down Girl is destined to become a feminist literary classic alongside the likes of The Beauty Myth by NaomiWolf or Betty Friedan''s The Feminine Mystique." -- Jennifer Taylor Skinner, The Electorette podcast"In her new book, Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny, Kate Manne examines an unfortunately ubiquitous reality through an intriguing lens. Manne, who teaches philosophy at Cornell, looks at misogyny from the perspective of power: rather than focus on whether individual men are misogynists or feel deep hatred for women, we would do well to spend more time wrestling with the power structures that not only allow for endless sympathy and space for men''s poorbehavior, but also-most crucially-help teach men that women are supposed to behave in certain ways." -- Isaac Chotiner, Slate"What We''re Reading: A compelling conversation [by Isaac Chotiner, Slate, see above] with Kate Manne, a professor of philosophy at Cornell University and the author of a new book on structural misogyny, may change the way you think about the #MeToo moment. She makes a case for treating the wave of revelations as an opportunity to re-examine a culture-wide system of discrimination, not just individual instances of bigotry and harassment." -- AmandaTaub, The New York Times"What is misogyny? How is it different from sexism? And why does the male-dominated status quo seem to persist? A new book by Cornell philosophy professor Kate Manne has answers. She argues that misogyny is not about male hostility or hatred toward women-instead, it''s about controlling and punishing women who challenge male dominance.
Misogyny rewards women who reinforce the status quo and punishes those who don''t.This book calls attention to the roles we allplay in society, roles that we''re assigned at birth and rarely question, and how we punish people-especially women-when they defy those roles." -- Sean Illing, Vox"In the fiercely argued and timely study Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny (Oxford), the philosopher Kate Manne makes a consonant argument [with anthropologist Alan Fiske and psychologist Tage Rai] about sexual violence. "The idea of rapists as monsters exonerates by caricature," she writes, urging us to recognize "the banality of misogyny," the disturbing possibility that "people may know full well that those they treat in brutally degrading andinhuman ways are fellow human beings, underneath a more or less thin veneer of false consciousness.There has always been something optimistic about the idea that our worst acts of inhumanity are based on confusion.It suggests that we could make the world better simply by having a clearer grasp of reality. The truth may be harder to accept: that our best and our worst tendencies arise precisely from seeing others as human." -- Paul Bloom, The New Yorker"Kate Manne has written an urgently relevant, brilliant but accessible analysis of how patriarchy functions within our context.
Brilliant discussions of "himpathy," victim blaming, and other related subjects follow.Manne''s analysis is unflinching and, as things stand right now, there is little room for hope that the big picture is going to improve any time soon. This is very highly recommended reading. Hands down, o.