I’m unfamiliar with Sommers, but Farrell has come out in favor of incest in Penthouse and Paglia is also in favor of many deviant practices. Farrell’s research is very slapdash and Paglia never claimed to be doing research as far as i know. Bell hooks has some funny comments on Paglia vis-a-vis race and culture BTW.
Farrell and Paglia have sterling credentials as ardent feminists. Yet, both have defended men.
So, their arguments that defend men and maleness gain extra credibility … given their support for what we would consider the radical feminist agenda.
Here’s the link to Farrell’s page on Wiki:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Warren_Farrell
Farrell has written that women are not superior to men, and that use of the “woman as victim” role in much of mainstream feminism has essentially stifled debate.
He holds an M.A. and Ph.D. in Political Science (UCLA; New York University (NYU)). He taught at the School of Medicine at the University of California, San Diego, and at Georgetown University, Rutgers, Brooklyn College, and American University.
Farrell wrote “The Myth of Male Power” rejecting the sexism displayed against men by women.
As a champion of feminism, he served on the board of the New York chapter of the National Organization for Women (NOW).
However, he was asked to leave NOW as his views diverged from those generally held in the organization. He was critical of what he saw as female exclusiveness and disregard for men’s issues. His early books The Liberated Man and Why Men Are the Way They Are were more in the vein of a type of men’s liberation – an approach to men’s issues similar to that of feminism to women’s issues.
Here is Paglia’s Wiki page:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Camille_Paglia
Paglia is a strong critic of much of the feminism that began with Betty Friedan’s 1962 The Feminine Mystique.
At the same time Paglia’s embrace of fetishism, pornography, prostitution and, most prominently, male homosexuality, puts her at odds with the “family values” of American social conservatives. I have heard her claim to have come from a Catholic family but now embraces wicca and has a lesbian “partner” with whom she has a child.
Meanwhile, Paglia is critical of the influence certain French philosophers and theorists (including Jacques Lacan, Jacques Derrida, Helene Cixous and Michel Foucault) have had on the humanities in the U.S. and favors a curriculum grounded in comparative religion, art history and the literary canon, with a greater emphasis on facts in the teaching of history.
Any critic of Foucault and his philosophy of “deconstructionism” is a friend of mine, frankly.
Since many of her debating points are so close to traditional Catholicism, we should pray for her to revert to Catholicism.
Her supporters (for different reasons) include Andrew Sullivan, Christina Hoff Sommers, Rush Limbaugh, Bill Maher, Matt Drudge and her Yale mentor Harold Bloom.