Ernest Belfort Bax on feminism’s relation to chivalry
Over 100 years ago E.B. Bax talked of first-wave feminists soliciting, expecting and receiving male chivalry for the benefit of women. Has anything changed?
Over 100 years ago E.B. Bax talked of first-wave feminists soliciting, expecting and receiving male chivalry for the benefit of women. Has anything changed?
In an age of great safety and convenience, perhaps its time to reconsider the role of chivalry.
When women cry they are absolved from crimes by a chivalrous audience. Would the same work for men?
Unlike a more humane relationship of conjugal love, the long-reigning ideology of courtly love deepens men’s subordination to women.
Why should we fight? A very good question. Max takes this on with a style and insight only he has.
Men, women and heroism.
“Yvain and Gawain were like two fighting dogs on whom the sisters had placed bets and set at each other.”
An “interview [with] Paul Bois, a conservative filmmaker who is trying to crowdfund a short film which he describes as a medieval-horror-action film that is a social commentary on modern ideological feminism.”
As a small child, Mark Dent saw that the privilege and entitlement of women was somewhat scary.
Is criminal justice used as a pretext for promoting men’s subordination to women?