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In Praise of the Sexual Constitution


Article # : 12309 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 1 / 1987  2,999 Words
Author : Michael Levin
Michael Levin is professor of philosophy at City University of New York and the author of Feminism and Freedom.

       The verdict is indeed in. A bank's advertisements for tuition loans feature a little girl playing doctor. Another girl, this time on a brochure for summer camp, wields a baseball bat as confidently as Darryl Strawberry. Newspaper articles bemoan the neglect suffered by the new mother when her husband bonds with the baby. To judge by television programs, most police officers are female. A welter of government studies and lawsuits suggests that sex discrimination is a national crisis. Underway is a ubiquitous if uncoordinated effort to kill masculinity - to create an aversion to it to the extent that its very existence is doubted.
       
        George Gilder was angry and apprehensive about this attack on manhood in Sexual Suicide, originally published in 1973, and he is just as angry but considerably more apprehensive in Men and Marriage, his new update of Sexual Suicide. Gilder's fear is not that emasculation will transform the American male into a race of Alan Aldas. He rightly insists upon the biological basis of the male's greater aggressiveness and readiness to use force, and the consequent impossibility of expunging these tendencies by any regimen of socialization. He believes, in fact (and again rightly), that only one group of people in the world is so "abjectly retarded," so "mystically impervious to its own nature" as to deny this sex difference - "the community of social science scholars in America."
       
        Gilder worries, rather, that the ejection of males from their traditional, constructive role as provider and protector will rechannel their inherently dangerous energies toward disruptive needs. As Gilder sees it, the building block of society is the family with children, created by a bargain between the sexes. The woman agrees to ... (1999 of 18290 Characters)
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