I really disagree with Ussusimiel's post and, while I really only have personal testimony to back it up, I think it's worth posting.
(I don't disagree that misogyny is a problem and is worth addressing, I just disagree with the extent to which you have attempted to explain it through material events etc.)
ussusimiel wrote:Rigel wrote:Are we really still so primitive ...?
It has to do with male identity. Male identity, IMO, is founded in the female. This is a consequence of birth and the womb. The female power of fertility means that everybody's first connection with the world is through their mother. For a woman this is simply an introduction to her own power and nature that she will, hopefully, grow into and experience as she gets older.
This is already highly illogical, IMO. The idea that the first connection to the world is privileged in the individual's mind as they develop is not necessarily correct. Moreover, the handing of the child to the mother for the first few instants of bonding is a choice made by society, not a natural thing - there is no inherent reason not to hand the child to the father and allow the father to bond with the child first. For my part, I was handed to my grandmother first. Those in closest proximity to me have always felt I had a special bond with her. I would say I have a special bond with no one, or rather I have a special bond with everyone (same difference).
For a man, however, it is something altogether different. For the male, the experience is that the world can only be fully engaged with through the connection with the female, something he (erroneously, as it turns out) feels he doesn't possess.
Except that once the cord is cut, the world can easily be engaged with without the female, as I myself have experienced. I have sexual desires towards women, and am not really sure if I would turn down sex given the chance, but I have no enacted desire to make bonds with attractive women that become intimate in nature to get sexual gratification. Women simply aren't sex objects to me.
Now it gets complicated, because even though the world we live in is male controlled and dominated it is quite possible for a man to feel that he is powerless and has nothing. This will intuitively (and correctly) be felt to be related to the female. The man will (wrongly) believe that he is nothing because of women (his lack of success will be due to a lack of connection to the real world, a connection that requires a female element). For those who are frustrated by this, women will start to become a focus for their anger.
Again, I disagree. Besides the fact that this world is not male controlled and dominated, because there are decisions made by women every day that effect what happens in the world, and research done by women that effect those decisions, etc, and most importantly women had a role in raising many of the men who take a part in controlling the world. In other words, you can't claim feminine dominance in the realm of experience with the world and then turn around and say this is a male dominated world - if the female is the primary source of experience with the world, for maternal reasons I suppose, then she is at fault for it becoming a male dominated world.
Moreover, I disagree because I feel powerless and like I have nothing, but my anger is not pointed at women, nor would I say that I have a great deal of anger most of the time. Usually my anger is spent at institutions and ideologies.
The post-modern world allows women to be successful in ways that were not possible before, for example, through the Internet. A successful woman is a double threat to the powerless, frustrated male. She not only possesses what he needs, she is also seen as colonising a previously male dominated area (e.g. the intellectual, business, science etc.).
The woman who enters into such spheres doesn't become threatening, she actually becomes attractive as a mate, because she brings more income to the table and more intelligence to discuss.
Your post involves as much an artificial construction of masculinity and femininity as some sort of universal thing, without scientific evidence or otherwise, as it does anything else, and IMO it flies in the face of what I am actually used to.
I think if you were going to get to a fruitful discussion of why this is a "male dominated" world, the most useful things to talk about would be
-do women tend to be biologically weaker than men at physical tasks, despite their vaunted reputation for bearing pain during pregnancy.
-Does pregnancy have an effect on a woman's ability to enter into and maintain a place in the workforce?