Abstract
How do men respond to feminist movements and to shifts in the gender order? In this paper, I introduce the concept of historical gender formation to show how shifting social conditions over the past forty years shaped a range of men's organized responses to feminism. Focusing on the US, I show how progressive men reacted to feminism in the 1970s by forming an internally contradictory 'men's liberation' movement that soon split into opposing antifeminist and pro-feminist factions. Three large transformations of the 1980s and 1990s - the professional institutionalization of feminism, the rise of a postfeminist sensibility, and shifts in the political economy (especially deindustrialization and the rise of the neoliberal state) - generated new possibilities. I end by pointing to an emergent moderate men's rights discourse that appeals to a postfeminist sensibility, and to an increasingly diverse base for men's work to prevent violence against women.
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Messner, M. A. (2016). Forks in the road of men’s gender politics: Men’s rights Vs feminist allies. In International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy (Vol. 5, pp. 6–20). Queensland University of Technology. https://doi.org/10.5204/ijcjsd.v5i2.301
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