Difference between revisions of "Atheism and sexism"

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*[[Western atheism and race]]
 
*[[Western atheism and race]]
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== External links ==
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*[http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/09/15/do-atheists-have-a-sexism-problem_n_964354.html Do atheists have a sexism problem?]
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{{Nb Atheism}}
 
{{Nb Atheism}}
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== Notes ==
 
== Notes ==
 
{{reflist|2}}
 
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Revision as of 18:53, September 8, 2013

The atheist population is skewed towards having more men than women (see: Atheism and women). In addition, racial minorities in the Western World are underrepresented within the atheist population (see: Western atheism and race).

Writing on the sexism within the atheist community, atheist Victoria Bekiempis wrote in a Guardian article entitled Why the New Atheism is a boys' club:

Annie Laurie Gaylor, who founded the Freedom From Religion Foundation with her mother, Anne Nicol Gaylor, in 1978, sums it up succinctly: “One word — sexism.” Gaylor’s husband, Dan Barker, who helms the organization along with her, is usually the one invited to speaking engagements, despite her longer tenure as the organization’s leader and her numerous books on atheism.[1]

Katie Engelhart in her July 21, 2013 Salon article Atheism Has a Women Problem wrote:

Around the time that the Dawkins-Hitchens-Harris tripartite published its big wave of Atheist critique, historian Jennifer Michael Hecht published “ Doubt” and journalist Susan Jacoby published “ Freethinkers“—both critically acclaimed. And yet, these women, and many others, failed to emerge as public figures, household names. “Nobody talked about [Doubt] as a ‘phenomenon,’” Hecht has noted. “They just talked about the book.” What gives?

The lady Atheist has a troubled history....[2]

For more information please see:

See also

External links

Notes