Difference between revisions of "Gender Transition Movement"

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Warren Farrell, author of The Myth of Male Power, advocates a "gender transition movement" which refers to more role-sharing among men and women than was traditionally the case. Farrell proposes, for example, that women may wish to work and labor more for income, and men may wish to spend more time with family and children.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Myth_of_Male_Power Warren Farrell, The Myth of Male Power]</ref><ref>[https://gynocentrism.com/2022/08/27/toward-a-gender-transition-movement-by-warren-farrell/ Warren Farrell, Toward A Gender Transition Movement, in Does Feminism Discriminate Against Men?]</ref>
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Warren Farrell, author of The Myth of Male Power, advocates a "gender transition movement" which refers to more role-sharing among men and women than was traditionally the case. Farrell proposes, for example, that women may wish to work and labor more for income so that "neither sex is expected to pay more than half the income,"<ref>[The Myth of Male Power]</ref> and men may wish to spend more time with family and children.<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Myth_of_Male_Power Warren Farrell, The Myth of Male Power]</ref><ref>[https://gynocentrism.com/2022/08/27/toward-a-gender-transition-movement-by-warren-farrell/ Warren Farrell, Toward A Gender Transition Movement, in Does Feminism Discriminate Against Men?]</ref>
   
 
Farrell states, "Taking what had worked for most women and seeing it as a plot against them led us to see men as “owing” women. This created Stage II entitlement: women being entitled to compensation for past oppression. This prevented us from seeing the need to make a transition from Stage I to Stage II together : the need not for a women’s movement or a men’s movement, but for a gender transition movement."<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Myth_of_Male_Power Warren Farrell, The Myth of Male Power]</ref>
 
Farrell states, "Taking what had worked for most women and seeing it as a plot against them led us to see men as “owing” women. This created Stage II entitlement: women being entitled to compensation for past oppression. This prevented us from seeing the need to make a transition from Stage I to Stage II together : the need not for a women’s movement or a men’s movement, but for a gender transition movement."<ref>[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Myth_of_Male_Power Warren Farrell, The Myth of Male Power]</ref>

Revision as of 11:55, 5 September 2022

Warren Farrell, author of The Myth of Male Power, advocates a "gender transition movement" which refers to more role-sharing among men and women than was traditionally the case. Farrell proposes, for example, that women may wish to work and labor more for income so that "neither sex is expected to pay more than half the income,"[1] and men may wish to spend more time with family and children.[2][3]

Farrell states, "Taking what had worked for most women and seeing it as a plot against them led us to see men as “owing” women. This created Stage II entitlement: women being entitled to compensation for past oppression. This prevented us from seeing the need to make a transition from Stage I to Stage II together : the need not for a women’s movement or a men’s movement, but for a gender transition movement."[4]

He further states, "A gender transition movement will be the longest of all movements because it is not proposing merely to integrate blacks or Latinos into a system that already exists; rather, it is proposing an evolutionary shift in the system itself—an end to “woman-the-protected” and “man-the-protector.”[5]

Farrell breaks down his proposed gender transition movement into stages of a grand historical process, which can be described as follows:

1. Historically men and women adhered to strict gender roles for the sake of survival.
2. Women chose to "liberate" themselves from that role to gain more freedom.
3. Men have responded women's "liberation" by proposing they too might be liberated from certain traditional roles.
4. Ideally this unfolding process can culminate in a gender liberation movement for all.[6]


See Also

References