Male Psychology: The Magazine
Politicians can’t hear what men don’t say. An interview with Ann Widdecombe.
“I feel very strongly that the pendulum has swung too far, as it always does, the swing from a very male dominated patriarchal society to a very, very female dominated society where men …”
“It has to start with listening”. A feminist comes to terms with the Men's Rights movement. (Inspiring quotes from Cassie Jaye’s TEDx Talk).
“Why couldn't I simply learn about men's issues and have compassion for male victims without jumping at the opportunity to insist that women are the real victims?”
The Cassie Jaye interview: reflections on The Red Pill movie, five years on
Gender scholars and activists were aghast a few years ago at the depiction of a feminist, in a documentary movie called The Red Pill, who unexpectedly learned to empathise with men. In a rare interview, director and star of The Red Pill, Cassie Jaye, reflects upon the impact the movie has had on herself and others.
The All-Party Parliamentary Group report on Issues Affecting Men and Boys is a welcome step in the right direction, but must not be led astray, as initiatives have been in the past
The most positive news so far this year for the wellbeing of men and boys is the publication of the report, A Boy Today, by the All-Party Parliamentary Group on Issues Affecting Men and Boys.
What was missing from the BBC Panorama exploration of domestic violence
The Panorama programme on domestic violence failed to adequately highlight two important issues: male victims and female perpetrators.
Should we be concerned about the messages that men and boys are exposed to?
I have concerns as to how these inconsistencies and sweeping generalisations about men and boys go unchallenged.
Being a Man, Plus ça Change
…an attack upon masculinity is an attack upon one’s sense of self, of identity. …What, then, is the right psychological defence against such an attack?
Male rape in the media: The forgotten victims.
For years male rape has been shown as comedy, in films to TV shows, so much that it’s now a cliché. It even appears in children’s cartoon shows such as SpongeBob SquarePants
Do we really need Gillette to encourage the majority of men to be what they already are?
The underlying assumptions made in the advert are that men are inherently bad – men are violent, sexual predators who have had their way for long enough. Only through the power of encouragement and social grooming can we protect society from the menace that is toxic masculinity.