Provocative cultural commentator Stephen Marche examines the state of male-female relations in the 21st century, with the help of his wife, Toronto Life editor in chief Sarah Fulford. This is a deeply researched, personal essay on the aspects of everyday life where men and women meet. It's Marche's claim that the way we talk about men and women today is antiquated and that the failure to catch up to the new reality means we are not actually facing the real issues. Marche's message is thought-provoking and ultimately hopeful.
Record details
ISBN:9781443434836
Physical Description:print regular print ix, 241 pages ; 24 cm
How much should a man speak? -- Sex and money and dreams and children and power. The hollow patriarchy ; The new fatherhood ; Straight camp ; The pornography paradox ; Against outrage ; The boys' crisis, the girls' crisis ; The case for living in filth ; Messy hope -- Where the numbers come from.