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Feminism is exposed as a dishonest anti-male movement to extend the discrimination against men and secure even more privileges for women. Over a century after its first publication this essay is as relevant as it was then because men are still the oppressed and exploited sex. Men have become more disadvantaged in many regards. Moreover, feminism has not changed very much in its tenets and strategy. What Bax reveals about it is still its very essence as of today: The endorsement of gynocentrism and sex favouritism disguised as chivalry, its widespread support by men against their own interests,…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Feminism is exposed as a dishonest anti-male movement to extend the discrimination against men and secure even more privileges for women. Over a century after its first publication this essay is as relevant as it was then because men are still the oppressed and exploited sex. Men have become more disadvantaged in many regards. Moreover, feminism has not changed very much in its tenets and strategy. What Bax reveals about it is still its very essence as of today: The endorsement of gynocentrism and sex favouritism disguised as chivalry, its widespread support by men against their own interests, the contradictory oscillating between claiming equality of the sexes-equal rights for women-and claiming diminished responsibility because of the inferiority of women-no responsibilities, but special privileges for women. Facing the ideological omnipresence of feminism, Bax advocates the emancipation of men while repudiating the feminist myth that the sexes are equal or the female sex is superior.This book is a newly typeset and corrected edition of the original text published in 1913. In preparing this text, the orthography has been fixed and carefully modernized in a few instances.
Autorenporträt
Ernest Belfort Bax (1854¿1926) was a barrister, author, socialist and antifeminist. He studied philosophy in Germany. From the perspective of a barrister and a socialist he denounced the various privileges of women and the feminist movement, which sought to augment these privileges.