The Fraud of Feminism

audiobook

The Fraud of Feminism

by Ernest Belfort Bax

EN·~4 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total
1

PREFACE

3:41
2

INTRODUCTION

5:38
3

CHAPTER I HISTORICAL

12:49
4

CHAPTER II THE MAIN DOGMA OF MODERN FEMINISM

44:04
5

CHAPTER III THE ANTI-MAN CRUSADE

41:27
6

CHAPTER IV ALWAYS THE “INJURED INNOCENT”!

25:05
7

CHAPTER V THE “CHIVALRY” FAKE

15:14
8

CHAPTER VI SOME FEMINIST LIES AND FALLACIES

43:47
9

CHAPTER VII THE PSYCHOLOGY OF THE MOVEMENT

29:45
10

CHAPTER VIII THE INDICTMENT

23:21

Description

This work launches an unapologetic critique of what its author calls the Modern Feminist Movement, tackling the arguments and narratives that have shaped public perception. The preface sets a confrontational tone, arguing that many celebrated claims about women’s oppression are, in the writer’s view, repeated myths rather than facts. By juxtaposing legal cases, historical anecdotes, and contemporary commentary, the book aims to dismantle what it sees as contradictory slogans that demand both equality and special privileges.

In the introductory chapter, the author outlines a definition of “Modern Feminism” as a mindset he finds internally inconsistent, simultaneously demanding political rights while preserving legal immunities. Throughout, the text mixes polemical language with references to medical and legal authorities of its time, inviting listeners to follow a tightly argued, if contentious, line of reasoning. The style is brisk and polemic, offering a snapshot of early‑20th‑century cultural battles without venturing into later developments or resolutions.

Collections

Browse all

Details

Language

en

Duration

~4 hours (235K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2016-04-27

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Ernest Belfort Bax

Ernest Belfort Bax

1854–1926

A restless Victorian radical, barrister, and prolific man of letters, he wrote on socialism, philosophy, history, and politics with unusual range. His work offers a vivid glimpse into the arguments and ideals shaping British radical thought in the late 19th and early 20th centuries.

View all books

You may also like