Dictionary Definition
misogyny n : hatred of women [syn: misogynism]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From μισογυνία from μισογύνης from μισέω + γυνή.Noun
- The hatred of, or pathological aversion to women.
Synonyms
Derived terms
Translations
- Estonian: misogüünia, naistevihkamine
- Finnish: naisviha, misogynia
- Greek: μισογυνία, μισογυνισμός
- Polish: mizoginia , mizoginizm
- Scottish Gaelic: fuath bhan
Extensive Definition
Misogyny () is hatred (or contempt) of women.
Misogyny is parallel to misandry — the hatred of men.
Misogyny is also comparable with misanthropy, which is the
hatred of humanity generally. The antonym of misogyny is philogyny, love towards women.
Marcus Tullius
Cicero reports that Greek philosophers considered misogyny to
be caused by gynophobia, a fear of women.
Many feminists have proposed that misogyny both generates, and is
propagated by, patriarchal
social structures.
Etymology
Misogyny is sometimes confused with the similar
looking word — misogamy — which means a hatred of marriage, hence
the following error.
- Any doubt he may have ever cherished in his misogamic breast concerning a woman's creative capacity. — Pall Mall Gazette, 7 January 1889
- He ... walked the banks apart, a thing of misogyny, in a suit of flannel. — Herman Charles Merivale, Faucit of Balliol, 1882
- Confound all women, I say, muttered the young misogynist. — William Makepeace Thackeray, The Virginians, 1878
- This psychosocial analysis of the murder of a white civil rights activist by her mulatto lover (Joe Christmas) is replete with themes of fate, free will, sociopathy, family violence, misogyny, miscegeny, and isolation versus community.
- — Karl Kirkland, 'On the Value of William Faulkner to Graduate Medical Education', Family Medicine 33 (2001): 664.
- You should get married. A misanthrope I can understand - a womanthrope, never!
Misogyny in Greek literature
Misogyny comes into English from the ancient Greek word, misogunia (), which survives in two passages. The earlier, longer and more complete passage comes from a stoic philosopher called Antipater of Tarsus in a moral tract known as On Marriage (c. 150 BC). Antipater argues that marriage is the foundation of the state, and considers it to be based on divine (polytheistic) decree.}}The other surviving use of the original Greek
word is by Chrysippus, in a
fragment from On affections, quoted by Galen in Hippocrates on
Affections. Here, misogyny is the first in a short list of three
"disaffections" — women, wine and humanity (misogunian, misoinian,
misanthrōpian). Chrysippus' point is more abstract than
Antipaters', and Galen quotes the passage as an example of an
opinion contrary to his own. What is clear, however, is that he
groups hatred of women with hatred of humanity generally, and even
hatred of wine. "It was the prevailing medical opinion of his day
that wine strengthens body and soul alike." So, as with his fellow
stoic, Antipater, misogyny is viewed negatively, a disease, a dislike of something
that is good. It is this issue of conflicted or alternating
emotions that was philosophically contentious to the ancient
writers. Ricardo Salles suggests the general stoic view was that,
"A man may not only alternate between philogyny and misogyny,
philanthropy and misanthropy, but be prompted to each by the
other." Misogynist is also found in the Greek — misogunēs () — in
Deipnosophistae (above) and in Plutarch's
Parallel Lives, where it is used as the title of Heracles in the
history of Phocion. It was
also the title of a play by Menander, which we
know of from book seven (concerning Alexandria) of
Strabo's 17
volume Geography,
Menander also wrote a play called Misoumenos or The Man She Hated.
Another Greek play with a similar name, Misogunos or Woman-hater,
is reported by Cicero (in Latin) and attributed to Atilius. The
context is worth quoting in full, because it deals directly with
matters already discussed in this article.
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Anglophobia, Russophobia, abhorrence, abomination, anti-Semitism,
antipathy, aversion, bachelordom, bachelorhood, bachelorism, bachelorship, bigotry, celibacy, continence, despitefulness, detestation, dislike, execration, hate, hatred, loathing, maidenhead, maidenhood, malevolence, malice, malignity, misandry, misanthropy, misogamy, monachism, monasticism, odium, race hatred, racism, repugnance, single
blessedness, single state, singleness, spinsterhood, spite, spitefulness, unwed state,
vials of hate, vials of wrath, virgin state, virginity, xenophobia