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Mansplaining: New solutions to a tiresome old problem
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<blockquote data-quote="cheryl" data-source="post: 1294" data-attributes="member: 1"><p><a href="https://theconversation.com/mansplaining-new-solutions-to-a-tiresome-old-problem-120400" target="_blank"><strong>Mansplaining: New solutions to a tiresome old problem - The Conversation</strong></a></p><p></p><p>In 2008, author Rebecca Solnit’s <a href="http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175584/rebecca_solnit_the_archipelago_of_ignorance" target="_blank">now famous essay</a>, <em>Men Explain Things to Me</em>, set off a firestorm.</p><p></p><p>Though Solnit didn’t use the term “mansplaining,” the essay is credited with birthing the term that’s now part of regular parlance. Women (and other underrepresented groups such as people of colour and non-binary people) had finally found a way to articulate that phenomenon they routinely experienced, particularly at work.</p><p></p><p>Men feel the need to explain something to a woman, even if the woman hasn’t asked for an explanation and often pertaining to something that’s directly in the woman’s area of expertise and not at all in the man’s. Or when the topic is about a woman’s own experience and the man wants to explain her experience to her.</p><p></p><p>Even women who are famous for their mastery of a domain find themselves being mansplained.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="cheryl, post: 1294, member: 1"] [URL='https://theconversation.com/mansplaining-new-solutions-to-a-tiresome-old-problem-120400'][B]Mansplaining: New solutions to a tiresome old problem - The Conversation[/B][/URL] In 2008, author Rebecca Solnit’s [URL='http://www.tomdispatch.com/blog/175584/rebecca_solnit_the_archipelago_of_ignorance']now famous essay[/URL], [I]Men Explain Things to Me[/I], set off a firestorm. Though Solnit didn’t use the term “mansplaining,” the essay is credited with birthing the term that’s now part of regular parlance. Women (and other underrepresented groups such as people of colour and non-binary people) had finally found a way to articulate that phenomenon they routinely experienced, particularly at work. Men feel the need to explain something to a woman, even if the woman hasn’t asked for an explanation and often pertaining to something that’s directly in the woman’s area of expertise and not at all in the man’s. Or when the topic is about a woman’s own experience and the man wants to explain her experience to her. Even women who are famous for their mastery of a domain find themselves being mansplained. [/QUOTE]
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Mansplaining: New solutions to a tiresome old problem
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