The serious side of ‘mansplaining’ has been lost. That’s where the harm begins | Rebecca Solnit
The key context of the word I coined in 2008 is that mansplaining is one part of a huge problem - of who gets listened to, and who gets believed
I have a file on my desktop titled Mansplaining Olympic Tryouts, mostly screenshots of some of the most epic specimens I've come across on social media or that people have steered my way. They're grimly hilarious: a man explaining vaginas to a noted female gynaecologist, a man telling Sinn Fein adviser Siobhan Fenton to read the Good Friday agreement (she replied with a picture of herself with the book she wrote on that agreement), and the famous incident with Dr Jessica McCarty, about which she tweeted: At a Nasa Earth meeting 10 years ago, a white male postdoc interrupted me to tell me that I don't understand human drivers of fire, that I def needed to read McCarty et al. I looked him in the eye, pulled my long hair back so he could read my name tag. I'm McCarty et al.'"
The word mansplaining was coined by an anonymous person in response to my 2008 essay Men Explain Things to Me and has had a lively time of it ever since. It was a New York Times word of the year in 2010, and entered the Oxford English Dictionary in 2018; versions of it exist in many other languages from French to Icelandic, and the essay itself has appeared in many languages including Korean and Swedish. People often recount the opening incident in that almost 15-year-old essay, in which a man explained a book to me, too busy holding forth to notice that I was its author, as my friend was trying to tell him.
Rebecca Solnit is a Guardian US columnist
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