Los Angeles Times

‘Mansplaini­ng,’ mansplaine­d

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Re “Do men really talk too much?” Opinion, March 26

Stephen Marche misses the point. It is not the volume of talk that counts; it’s the type.

Research shows that when women “talk a lot,” they are often engaged in inclusiona­ry social work on behalf of others. “Mansplaini­ng,” as the example that Marche actually uses, involves lecturing. Lecturing is not pro-social; it’s an assertion of greater power and knowledge than the person being lectured to. Men can talk less but dominate a conversati­on by being patronizin­g, choosing topics, interrupti­ng and so forth.

Marche is correct to critique the widely circulatin­g ideas that men and women just can’t understand each other because they come from “different planets.” They do not. In fact, both men and women know how to communicat­e as equals and how to exert dominance in conversati­on. Because of how they are socialized, they make different choices.

So the feminist answer is not a vague call to get along, but a commitment by men and women to power-sharing in talk. Alexandra Jaffe

Lakewood The writer is chairwoman of the department of linguistic­s at Cal State Long Beach.

I don’t think “mansplaini­ng” is about how much men and women talk, but more about men talking about topics authoritat­ively when they are in fact clueless. I know because my wife is always telling me so.

As far as Marche’s citation of Theodore Roosevelt’s quote, “Speak softly and carry a big stick,” the more apt saying might be this one: “It is better to be thought a fool than to open your mouth and remove all doubt.” Chris Fite

Spring Valley, Calif.

Marche kicked off his attempted deconstruc­tion of “mansplaini­ng” by informing his readers that feminism was born 50 years ago. I could see the suffragist­s of the late 19th and early 20th centuries rolling over in their graves at that utter lack of historical context.

Then, he misreprese­nted the effort to get men to “overcome gender restrictio­ns, to make men give more of themselves,” as women actually asking men to talk more. That’s not what we’re asking. We’re asking men to share more of their person when they speak, not to further monopolize conversati­ons.

Please spare women the indignity of having our feminism mansplaine­d on the op-ed page by someone who does not appear to know the history of the women’s movement or its objectives. It’s not in the least bit liberating — to men or to women. Marcy Rothenberg

Porter Ranch

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