Entitled : how male privilege hurts women /

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Bibliographic Details
Author / Creator:Manne, Kate, author.
Edition:First edition.
Imprint:New York : Crown, [2020]
©2020
Description:1 online resource (270 pages.)
Language:English
Subject:Misogyny.
Privilege (Social psychology)
Entitlement attitudes.
Sex role.
Male domination (Social structure)
Entitlement attitudes.
Male domination (Social structure)
Misogyny.
Privilege (Social psychology)
Sex role.
Format: E-Resource Book
URL for this record:http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/12383162
Hidden Bibliographic Details
ISBN:9781984826565 (electronic bk.)
1984826565 (electronic bk.)
9781984826558
1984826557
Notes:Includes bibliographical references and index.
Description based on print version record.
Other form:Online version: Manne, Kate. Entitled First edition. New York : Crown, [2020] 9781984826565
Original 9781984826558 1984826557
Review by Choice Review

Following the publication of Down Girl (CH, Aug'18, 55-4534), Manne's latest book investigates many of the same themes, discussing contemporary events through a feminist philosophical perspective. Here, Manne (Cornell Univ.) explores entitlement, defining it as someone's sense of what they "deserve or are owed." Male entitlement, she argues, expects women to offer traditionally feminine goods (like care) and refrain from taking traditionally masculine goods (like power or authority). It deprives women of the things they are genuinely entitled to, like sexual autonomy, jobs, and epistemic authority. Manne analyzes prominent events to develop her thesis, including Brett Kavanaugh's hearings and Elliot Rodger's mass murders (Rodger inspired the "incel" movement). Citing her previous work on misogyny, which she defines as "the 'law enforcement' branch of patriarchy," Manne argues that one aspect of male entitlement is punishment of (any) women when men are denied what they expect. The best insights involve the author's discussion of how the policing of bodies overlaps through the anti-abortion movement and transphobic activism--in both cases, the well-being of women is used as a guise to uphold social norms that ensure women's bodies remain clearly demarcated for their socially prescribed roles. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers through faculty; professionals. --Margaret Alison Betz, Rutgers University, Camden

Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Cornell University philosopher Manne (Down Girl) delivers a hard-hitting and outrage-inspiring interrogation of the links between male entitlement, both individual and systemic, and misogyny. Addressing entitled male sexual behavior, Manne scrutinizes "himpathy," "herasure," and victim blaming in the public response to sexual assault allegations against Supreme Court justice Brett Kavanaugh and Stanford University student Brock Turner, and analyzes issues of consent and "social programming" in the viral New Yorker short story "Cat Person" and a woman's account of her distressing sexual encounter with comedian Aziz Ansari. Manne also documents discrepancies in the medical care received by men and women, and claims that the assumption of the male body as a default leads health-care professionals to doubt women's accounts of their own pain. In the political realm, Manne cites studies showing that women seeking power must be "exceptionally communal" to a degree not required of their male peers to explain the rise and fall of Elizabeth Warren's presidential campaign. Manne concludes with an avowal that girls and women are justifiably entitled to be valued, cared for, and believed, and gives readers a powerful framework for understanding and confronting challenges in their own lives. This incisive feminist treatise is a must-read. Agent: Lucy Cleland, Kneerim & Williams. (Aug.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

Having astutely explored the nuances of hostile treatment faced by women in her previous work Down Girl, Manne (philosophy, Cornell Univ.) now takes another angle on the social inequalities of gender by examining nine kinds of male entitlement and their effects. Most of the topics discussed throughout--the expectation that women should freely give housework, childcare, and sex and refrain from claiming positions of power and intellectual space--will certainly be known to readers familiar with the overall issue; indeed, several incidents in this book, such as the 2014 Isla Vista killings and the furor of the 2016 election, are ones that Manne has discussed more abstractly in her previous work. She also describes the influence of Christine Blasey Ford's testimony, and continues the conversation on "himpathy," or sympathy towards male perpetrators of sexual violence, that began in Down Girl. Manne's philosophical approach provides valuable fresh insights, with the chapter on the disparity in health care being of note. VERDICT An effective text on how women are affected by the assumed privileges of men, and the structural forces that enforce and uphold those privileges.--Kathleen McCallister, William & Mary Libs., Williamsburg, VA

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A Cornell University feminist philosopher takes aim at male privilege in the age of #MeToo. Building on the ideas from her previous book, Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny, Manne expands her critique of "himpathy," her word for the sympathy given to "powerful and privileged boys and men who commit acts of sexual violence or engage in other misogynistic behavior." She's likely to make few converts, though, with a book that preaches too heavily to the progressive choir. Manne draws on decades of studies showing that Americans judge women more harshly than similarly or less competent men, which may interest Gen-Z readers more than their elders, most of whom will be familiar with much of the research. A larger problem is the air of special pleading. Manne argues that many men have "an unwarranted sense of entitlement"--exemplified by mansplaining, male hostility in online "incel" ("involuntary celibate") forums, and Brett Kavanaugh's "aggrieved, belligerent, and, at times, borderline unhinged conduct" at his Supreme Court confirmation hearings--while women are often deprived of "their genuine entitlement" to things such as political clout and adequate pain relief from doctors. Without convincingly reconciling those two positions, the author's polemical case also takes a shortsighted view of sexual double standards, genuflecting before recent feminist scholarship (from Patricia Hill Collins, Tressie McMillan Cottom, Kimberlé Crenshaw, and others) and academic orthodoxies while ignoring landmarks like Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex and Shulamith Firestone's The Dialectic of Sex. It's striking that this book--appearing just before the Aug. 26 centennial of women's suffrage--says so little about the contributions of earlier generations of feminists or philosophers. Hopefully in her next book Manne will extend her range and build on the potential she showed in Down Girl. A well-meaning but myopic view of sexual double standards in the U.S. and how they hurt women. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Review by Choice Review


Review by Publisher's Weekly Review


Review by Library Journal Review


Review by Kirkus Book Review