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OverviewFor two centuries, feminism organized itself around an enemy that had a face. The father, the husband, the boss, the harasser, the legislator. A structure called patriarchy that, at its core, presupposed a patriarch. That enemy has changed shape. In After Patriarchy, J.J. Ramos argues that the structures most directly constraining women's lives in 2026 are no longer staffed by patriarchs. The hiring decision has migrated from a manager to a model. The credit decision from a loan officer to an algorithm. The reproductive choice from a husband or a state to a market. The reputational economy from the public square to the platform. None of these systems were built to discriminate. All of them produce gendered outcomes anyway. And a feminism that keeps fighting men as the central enemy when the constraint is structural will keep winning the visible battles and losing the systemic war. The book is in four parts. Part I argues that the diagnostic concept of patriarchy has aged out. Part II maps the systems that replaced it: the algorithm as authority, the market as mother, the platform as public square, the optimization as norm. Part III refuses to dodge the internal feminist conflicts that surface when the external enemy weakens - over class, over race, over age, over what the word woman now names. Part IV is constructive: a feminism of structure (audit law, procurement, antitrust), a feminism of solidarity (care-worker organizing, the new feminist unionism), and a feminism of build (alternative infrastructure, women-led capital, the institutions the next wave will need). Drawing on the feminist tradition from Wollstonecraft and de Beauvoir to bell hooks, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Kate Manne, and Amia Srinivasan, and on the algorithmic-justice scholarship of Joy Buolamwini, Safiya Umoja Noble, Cathy O'Neil, and Ruha Benjamin, Ramos makes the case that retiring the inherited enemy is the precondition for the next stage of feminist work. The post-patriarchy fight is harder than the one before it. It is also more honest. For readers of The Right to Sex, Down Girl, Invisible Women, The Second Sex, and The Next Wave: Feminism After the Algorithm - written from the moment the inherited movement vocabulary stopped reaching the constraint it was supposed to name. Full Product DetailsAuthor: J J RamosPublisher: J.J. Ramos Imprint: J.J. Ramos Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 21.60cm Weight: 0.349kg ISBN: 9798235982611Pages: 302 Publication Date: 02 June 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsAuthor InformationJ.J. Ramos is a writer whose work examines feminism, technology, and the structures that shape modern life. She writes about power, identity, labor, and social change, with a particular interest in how emerging technologies are transforming longstanding questions about equality and human freedom. Her work bridges intellectual inquiry and everyday experience, exploring how broad cultural and technological shifts are felt in homes, workplaces, institutions, and relationships. Through clear and accessible prose, she seeks to make complex ideas visible and to illuminate the forces that often operate unnoticed beneath contemporary life. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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