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Dorothy Dinnerstein Dorothy Dinnerstein
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Dorothy Dinnerstein (April 4, 1923 – December 17, 1992) was an American academic and activist, best known for her 1976 book The Mermaid and the Minotaur. Drawing from elements of Sigmund Freud's psychoanalysis, particularly as developed by Melanie Klein, Dinnerstein argued that sexism and aggression were both inevitable consequences of child rearing being left exclusively to women. As a solution, Dinnerstein proposed that men and women equally share infant and child care responsibilities. Her theories were not widely accepted at the time they were published. Dorothy Dinnerstein was a feminist, expressing her position by stating that “it's easier for women than for men to see what's wrong with the world that men have run". Dorothy Dinnerstein (4. April 1923 – 17. Dezember 1992) war eine amerikanische Wissenschaftlerin und feministisch-politische Aktivistin. Die Professorin für Psychologie an der Rudgers University wurde weltweit bekannt durch ihr 1976 erschienenes Buch The Mermaid and the Minotaur – Sexual Arrangements and Human Malaise (deutsch: Das Arrangement der Geschlechter), das als Klassiker des modernen Feminismus gilt und in sieben Sprachen übersetzt wurde.
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