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− | === formatted === | + | * '''1983''', Sheila Ruth, quoted in Judith Evans (1986), ''Feminism and Political Theory'' [http://books.google.com/books?id=094_AAAAMAAJ], ISBN 0803997051, page 70: |
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− | * '''2009''', Judith A. Allen, ''The feminism of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: sexualities, histories, progressivism'', page 152: | |
− | *: Titling a 1914 public lecture series at New York's Astor Hotel, "Studies in Masculism," she complained that the printer objected to the word and attempted to change it. | |
− | *: Despite an unfriendly press, she specially targeted "masculist" authors and purveyors of negative views of women. | |
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− | * '''1983''', Sheila Ruth, quoted by Judith Evans (in '''1986'''), in ''Feminism and Political Theory'', page 70 [http://books.google.com/books?id=094_AAAAMAAJ, ISBN 0803997051]: | |
| *: Fascism, fully revealed, is the extreme, exquisite expression of '''masculism''', of patriarchy, and thus the natural enemy of feminism, its quintessential opposite. | | *: Fascism, fully revealed, is the extreme, exquisite expression of '''masculism''', of patriarchy, and thus the natural enemy of feminism, its quintessential opposite. |
− | | + | * '''1997''', Nalini Persram, "In my father's house are many mansions", in ''Black British Feminism: A Reader'' [http://books.google.com/books?id=GdSqaz6NBMIC], ISBN 0415152887, page 213: |
− | 1997, Nalini Persram, "In my father's house are many mansions", in Black British Feminism: A Reader http://books.google.com/books?id=GdSqaz6NBMIC, ISBN 0415152887, page 213: | + | *: It often takes a crisis of some sort to initiate the difficult but empowering feminist process of renegotiating the '''masculisms''' that dominate the discourses of origin, authenticity and belonging in a way that transforms margins into frontiers, lack into (ad)vantage. |
− | It often takes a crisis of some sort to initiate the difficult but empowering feminist process of renegotiating the masculisms that dominate the discourses of origin, authenticity and belonging in a way that transforms margins into frontiers, lack into (ad)vantage. | + | * '''2004''', Thomas Schatz, ''Hollywood'' [http://books.google.com/books?id=lM-rx7S2ijoC], ISBN 0415281350, page 73: |
− | 2004, Thomas Schatz, Hollywood http://books.google.com/books?id=lM-rx7S2ijoC, ISBN 0415281350, page 73: | + | *: The Rocky-Rambo syndrome puts on display the raw '''masculism''' which is at the bottom of conservative socialization and ideology. |
− | The Rocky-Rambo syndrome puts on display the raw which is at the bottom of conservative socialization and ideology. | + | * '''2009''', Judith A. Allen, ''The feminism of Charlotte Perkins Gilman: sexualities, histories, progressivism'', page 152: |
− | (rfv-sense) A social theory or political movement supporting the equality of both genders with each other in all aspects of public and private life. | + | *: Titling a 1914 public lecture series at New York's Astor Hotel, "Studies in '''Masculism'''," she complained that the printer objected to the word and attempted to change it. |
− | | + | *: Despite an unfriendly press, she specially targeted "masculist" authors and purveyors of negative views of women. |
− | http://www.allwords.com/word-masculism.htm | |
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− | variant of: | |
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− | masculinism, n. | |
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− | Advocacy of the rights of men; adherence to or promotion of opinions, values, etc., regarded as typical of men; (more generally) anti-feminism, machismo. | |
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− | http://dictionary.oed.com/cgi/entry/00302773 | |