The Indispensability of Men
For Father’s Day, a tribute to Camille Paglia’s brilliant, unapologetic defense of masculinity.
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Happy Father’s Day in the United States! I thought that, to celebrate, I would do the obvious thing and highlight a speech by the feminist Camille Paglia.
One of the strangest things that has happened in my lifetime is the emergence of the man as a pathetic figure, or a figure of fun. For the last fifteen years or so, you could see it in every walk of life—nowhere more so than in advertising.
There are two things you can always predict with 100 percent certainty if a family, any family, is featured in an advertisement. The first is that the family will be biracial. The second is that the man (especially if he is white) will be portrayed as an incompetent or a loser. If the problem is wrestling with the remote control, the children and wife will patiently have to show poor old dad how to work the darn thing. It is a small but significant example of a wider trend, because this is a time in which male role models have been stripped away from the culture.
We may have the culture of the “strong woman,” which I referred to in my Mother’s Day column. But “strong man” expressed by the praise toxic masculinity is now the phrase of choice is used to denote fear and even loathing. So I do the obvious thing and present and highlight a speech by the feminist Camille Paglia.