Disgraced American football player Ray Rice and his wife Janay Palmer. Andrew Burton / Getty Images
Disgraced American football player Ray Rice and his wife Janay Palmer. Andrew Burton / Getty Images
Disgraced American football player Ray Rice and his wife Janay Palmer. Andrew Burton / Getty Images
Disgraced American football player Ray Rice and his wife Janay Palmer. Andrew Burton / Getty Images

In a world in flux, what’s the point of men?


  • English
  • Arabic

The man stands by the open elevator door, clutching a purse in one hand as he reaches over his fiancée’s supine body to pick up the shoe that has fallen off her foot. He nudges her midsection, to get her out of the way of the closing door, before swinging her feet out of the way. He half-heartedly attempts to lift her up before a bystander – a hotel employee – comes along, and he roughly drops her back to the floor. The woman sits up groggily and the three figures – the man, the woman and the bystander – engage in a slowly moving tableau of equivocation, confusion and disorder. The man paces, the woman rocks back and forth on the floor and the bystander calls for assistance. Another figure, possibly a friend, comes along and helps the woman off the floor and half-carries her out of sight. The man half-heartedly offers the woman a hand, and she slaps it away.

The man, as nearly everyone in the United States knows by now, is the American football player Ray Rice. His then-fiancée, now-wife Janay was blocking that elevator door because he had just knocked her unconscious. The case was major sports news when it first came to light, with Rice suspended for two games of the current football season. Then it was a national scandal, when the videotaped footage from inside the elevator was leaked to the press, and the National Football League was excoriated for its sloppy and classless handling of the incident. But the images that played on an unending loop in the mind’s eye were that vicious punch and the sight of Rice, only seconds later, calmly moving his fiancée out of the way of that elevator door.

The story of 2014, around the world, was a familiar one: women abused, women assaulted, women attacked. The Nigerian extremist group Boko Haram abducted 276 teenage girls from a school in Borno State and fled with most of them to the remote forest, their fate still unknown. Young Muslim women, many from Europe, went to Syria to join up with ISIL. ISIL has gone so far as to enslave the women it captures, sexually abusing them before selling them in slave markets in Raqqa and Mosul, while other women were forcibly prevented from continuing in their professions. The Taliban stoned women to death and shot prominent female politicians in Afghanistan. The Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdogan, increasingly outspoken about his version of traditional values, declared last month that “you cannot put men and women on an equal footing … it’s against nature”.

Disdain for women, and a hidden legacy of violence, was hardly constrained to the Muslim world, or Islamic radicalism. The American comedian Bill Cosby was accused of rape and sexual assault by, at last count, 19 different women. Discussion of sexual assault on college campuses and in the American military reached fever pitch, most prominently in the recent controversy over an allegation of gang rape by fraternity members at the University of Virginia. The US Supreme Court ruled, in Burwell v Hobby Lobby, that American corporations could choose to opt out of paying for their female employees’ contraceptive coverage if it contradicted their religious beliefs. Women were in the cross-hairs.

But we could just as easily, and perhaps more usefully, turn around and argue that the story of 2014 was one about men: men scorned, men angry, men defending what they had come to see as their natural privileges against a late-breaking onset of female assertiveness. From the halls of the US Congress to the streets of Tikrit to Elliot Rodger, who killed six people in southern California because of the “oppressive feminist system” that made him an “involuntary celibate,” to the clammy caves of Twitter, where the perilously confusing video-game imbroglio known as Gamergate unfolded, men were lashing out in 2014, demanding to maintain the status quo in word and deed, even when the status quo they sought to maintain was an entirely fabricated construction.

Men were being singled out for blame for the very things some of them had been doing since, well, forever: treating women as their sexual playthings, acting as the unquestioned rulers of fiefdoms large and small, offering a kind of rough justice to the women and children under their rule. The rules were changing, and masculinity itself was in crisis. Who were men supposed to be? Who should they become?

Into this fray steps contrarian cultural critic and essayist Laura Kipnis, whose previous books include such argument starters as Against Love: A Polemic and How to Become a Scandal. Kipnis's Men: Notes From an Ongoing Investigation lives up to its arch title, studying an impressive array of deadbeats, malcontents, whiners and flakes in the hopes of coming to an understanding of the wayward male. Tiger Woods, Harold Bloom, Anthony Weiner and John Edwards are just some of the controversial figures placed under the microscope, but Kipnis's interest is less in castigation (all of these men have already received their fair share) than in treating masculinity, in all its variegated forms, as an alluring but alien lifeform, to be studied and deconstructed. Kipnis, who has previously written about the undying appeal of scandal, closed her book too early to pen responses to most of 2014's juiciest scandals, but the basic form – misbehaving men and the women who love them too much – hardly changes.

Feminism has meant women crossing over into traditionally masculine territory, as breadwinners and heads of households and independent operators. This has been, in nearly all respects, an unalloyed victory for the women themselves, freed from the often-confining roles of daughter and wife and mother, one after the other until death. But what of men? If men are not to be protectors of women and unquestioned authorities in their homes, who are they to be? In much of the West, we are in the midst of Kipnis’s “massive social and economic transformation”, in which men are being quietly retrained. And the fundamentalism of ISIL and the Taliban is, in large part, about bloodily defending a vision of manhood triumphant, of women relegated to the shadows.

2014 was also the 75th anniversary of Stagecoach, the classic John Ford Western that introduced a former football player and bit-part actor named John Wayne to a mass audience. This past year also marked the publication of a well-regarded Wayne biography by Scott Eyman, and his return raised a panoply of questions: was it still possible to be John Wayne? Was being John Wayne something to aspire to? (It turned out, alas, that even John Wayne was not really John Wayne; he was Marion Morrison, neurotic actor, imitating the manly icon, and only belatedly confusing himself with his most famous role.)

Feminism told men who they were not to be, but failed to provide much guidance about who they should become. And no parallel movement – masculinism? – arose to guide men away from some of their more self-destructive impulses. Watching John Wayne taught us less about being a man than quietly reminding us that manhood, too, was a ­performance.

From this perspective, much of contemporary politics suddenly snaps into focus. Masculine bluster is an advertising strategy, a campaign often intended to distract attention from the threadbareness of the ideas on display. The Russian strongman Vladimir Putin's impulsive annexation of the Crimea and disastrous showdown with the West were expressions of classical strongman behaviour – a self-appointed manly man intent on forcefully leading Mother Russia, a country that, he worried, might otherwise devolve into feminine dissipation. Putin's flailing was that of a leader who once released a campaign video of himself riding a horse shirtless and once shot a tiger with a tranquiliser dart. In a recent New Yorker profile of German chancellor Angela Merkel, Putin looses his black Labrador retriever on Merkel, knowing she is afraid of dogs. Merkel is quoted telling reporters, devastatingly: "I understand why he has to do this – to prove he's a man … He's afraid of his own weakness. Russia has nothing, no successful politics or economy. All they have is this."

Male authority is craved and resented, all at once. The guiding hand only too easily becomes the restraining fist. The Arab Spring, in this light, could be understood as a belated rebellion on the part of abused children against a tyrannous father. The yearning for order was too deep-rooted to be dismissed so easily; Egypt soon replaced one strongman, Hosni Mubarak, with another, General Abdel Fattah el-Sisi, a man who plays off similarly subtlety-free ­Putin-esque iconography, depicting himself as personally wrestling the feared Muslim Brotherhood into submission. Even the homegrown animus against US president Barack Obama can be understood, in part, as a buried frustration on the part of some voters with his determination not to play the cocky, ever-confident leader role. No flight suits for him.

Gamergate was the strangest of all. Beginning as a modestly constructive critique of the all-too-cozy relationship between video-game designers and the journalists who covered them, it soon devolved into a crude online attack on female gamers and game designers, seen as infecting a safely masculine corner of contemporary culture with unwanted political meaning. Gamergate was a bizarre amalgam of backlash politics and consumer dissatisfaction, born of a quasi-infantile desire to protect video games from the clammy hands of women intent on spoiling the fun. Any attempt to change the violent status quo, or create games that might appeal to a wider audience, was an assault on a safe space for (geeky) men. For these distressed gamers, it was masculinity that was under fire from a feminism intent on eliminating all opponents.

This defensive masculinity was an expression of a conservatism that saw itself as perpetually beleaguered, always in danger of being swept away by the winds of change. “Punishing imagined inferiors, subjecting victims to the same capricious abuses you yourself have suffered”: Kipnis describes combative literary critic Dale Peck’s brand of literary criticism in terms that could just as easily apply to the angry gamers or ISIL fighters. “Well, here’s a creative solution to a stored-up history of persecution, at least: counteracting its effects by deflecting them elsewhere.”

This is all, of course, Hillary Clinton's fault. OK, it isn't, but Hillary and her much-expected presidential campaign serve as a bellwether of the peculiarly tangled relationship of the personal and the political when it comes to gender. The male right-wing ideologues whose Hillary scare manuals Kipnis reviews/decodes in Men illogically associate her with Communist dictators and concentration camps, and Kipnis wonders what it is about Hillary that inspires such deranged antipathy. Since her husband's time as president, and her failed bid to oversee American health-care reform, Hillary has come to represent, for a certain conspiracy-minded perspective, the fear of womanhood ascendant, tyranny in sensible heels.

Her status as the early front-runner for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination has reactivated the panicmongers intent on transforming Hillary into a dictator-in-waiting. Kipnis summons Dorothy Dinnerstein's The Mermaid and the Minotaur to describe the "human malaise" whereby, in Kipnis's description, "men rule the world and women rule over childhood, and mothers are the 'first despots' in our lives".

In order to mature, children must overthrow the tyranny of the mother, making them reluctant to return that power to mother figures. While there will likely never be a “national Cambodian re-education camp for anyone caught wearing an Adam Smith necktie or scarf” in the United States, there is something undeniably revealing about the anxiety that creates such fever dreams.

Kipnis reminds us, in her expert undermining of the Hillary mouth-breathers, that the crisis of masculinity takes place simultaneously on the largest and smallest stages. Women are banging on the doors of corporate boardrooms, demanding to attend school and hold down jobs and drive cars, but they are also requesting some respite, at long last, from the endless drudgery of the nursery and the kitchen. We are at a moment where, in sharp contrast to much of recorded history, women are demanding a change to the familiar business of child-rearing and homemaking. Men are losing ground, or so it seems to those of them intent on protecting masculine privilege at all costs. “The historic distribution of power between the sexes is being revamped, power is a subject that cuts deep, and the male psyche is feeling a little embattled,” Kipnis notes. “Change hurts; loss rankles.”

Contemporary feminism defines womanhood in terms of the ground it seeks to make up: higher salaries, more respect, more self-determination, less verbal, emotional and sexual abuse. Feminism desires the status that men already have. So how can masculinity remove itself from its defensive crouch, intent on denying women what they want, and become a positive force in its own right? Nappies.

Nappies?

The solution, Kipnis gently suggests, lies less in socialist utopias than in the far more prosaic field of childcare. Perhaps if fathers shared more of the burden of childcare – changing nappies, warming bottles, preparing dinners and lunches and breakfasts – the tyrants of childhood to be overthrown would no longer be explicitly feminine. Men who grow up seeing men, and not just women, as the despots of childhood might be less threatened when a woman seeks that corner office, or that White House. “Men aren’t going to give up ruling the world until women stop ruling over childhood,” Kipnis argues, “meaning that if political power is ever really going to be reapportioned between the sexes, child-rearing would have to be reapportioned too.”

While it would undoubtedly be amusing to have cameras follow president Erdogan as he chased after his grandchildren at bath time, the larger point is to end the artificial cutting off of half of humanity from the beneficial drudgery of caring for home and family. It is still possible, after spending an entire day caring for a sick, cranky baby, to look down on the responsibilities traditionally known as women’s work as inherently inferior to men’s work, but doing so requires a near-heroic degree of denial. It’s a lot harder to denigrate women after spending a day – or even an hour – in their shoes. Nappy duty will not be enough to change the world. But it may at least change the terms of the conversation.

"It's been less than 50 years that women have been freed from at least some of the consequences of sexual expression. So what women are 'by nature'," Kipnis argues in her debate with conservative professor Harvey Mansfield, reprinted in Men, "I just think we don't yet know." Feminism feels like an elemental force of the contemporary world, and yet its ripple effects are only just starting to be felt. Some men lash out against what they fear with their brutal words and even more brutal fists; some have bought wholeheartedly into the new, more equitable ideal; many still remain on the sidelines. Who are men by nature? We don't yet know.

Saul Austerlitz is the author of Sitcom: A History in 24 Episodes from I Love Lucy to Community

Mercer, the investment consulting arm of US services company Marsh & McLennan, expects its wealth division to at least double its assets under management (AUM) in the Middle East as wealth in the region continues to grow despite economic headwinds, a company official said.

Mercer Wealth, which globally has $160 billion in AUM, plans to boost its AUM in the region to $2-$3bn in the next 2-3 years from the present $1bn, said Yasir AbuShaban, a Dubai-based principal with Mercer Wealth.

Within the next two to three years, we are looking at reaching $2 to $3 billion as a conservative estimate and we do see an opportunity to do so,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Mercer does not directly make investments, but allocates clients’ money they have discretion to, to professional asset managers. They also provide advice to clients.

“We have buying power. We can negotiate on their (client’s) behalf with asset managers to provide them lower fees than they otherwise would have to get on their own,” he added.

Mercer Wealth’s clients include sovereign wealth funds, family offices, and insurance companies among others.

From its office in Dubai, Mercer also looks after Africa, India and Turkey, where they also see opportunity for growth.

Wealth creation in Middle East and Africa (MEA) grew 8.5 per cent to $8.1 trillion last year from $7.5tn in 2015, higher than last year’s global average of 6 per cent and the second-highest growth in a region after Asia-Pacific which grew 9.9 per cent, according to consultancy Boston Consulting Group (BCG). In the region, where wealth grew just 1.9 per cent in 2015 compared with 2014, a pickup in oil prices has helped in wealth generation.

BCG is forecasting MEA wealth will rise to $12tn by 2021, growing at an annual average of 8 per cent.

Drivers of wealth generation in the region will be split evenly between new wealth creation and growth of performance of existing assets, according to BCG.

Another general trend in the region is clients’ looking for a comprehensive approach to investing, according to Mr AbuShaban.

“Institutional investors or some of the families are seeing a slowdown in the available capital they have to invest and in that sense they are looking at optimizing the way they manage their portfolios and making sure they are not investing haphazardly and different parts of their investment are working together,” said Mr AbuShaban.

Some clients also have a higher appetite for risk, given the low interest-rate environment that does not provide enough yield for some institutional investors. These clients are keen to invest in illiquid assets, such as private equity and infrastructure.

“What we have seen is a desire for higher returns in what has been a low-return environment specifically in various fixed income or bonds,” he said.

“In this environment, we have seen a de facto increase in the risk that clients are taking in things like illiquid investments, private equity investments, infrastructure and private debt, those kind of investments were higher illiquidity results in incrementally higher returns.”

The Abu Dhabi Investment Authority, one of the largest sovereign wealth funds, said in its 2016 report that has gradually increased its exposure in direct private equity and private credit transactions, mainly in Asian markets and especially in China and India. The authority’s private equity department focused on structured equities owing to “their defensive characteristics.”

What went into the film

25 visual effects (VFX) studios

2,150 VFX shots in a film with 2,500 shots

1,000 VFX artists

3,000 technicians

10 Concept artists, 25 3D designers

New sound technology, named 4D SRL

 

Company profile

Company name: Dharma

Date started: 2018

Founders: Charaf El Mansouri, Nisma Benani, Leah Howe

Based: Abu Dhabi

Sector: TravelTech

Funding stage: Pre-series A 

Investors: Convivialite Ventures, BY Partners, Shorooq Partners, L& Ventures, Flat6Labs

Trump v Khan

2016: Feud begins after Khan criticised Trump’s proposed Muslim travel ban to US

2017: Trump criticises Khan’s ‘no reason to be alarmed’ response to London Bridge terror attacks

2019: Trump calls Khan a “stone cold loser” before first state visit

2019: Trump tweets about “Khan’s Londonistan”, calling him “a national disgrace”

2022:  Khan’s office attributes rise in Islamophobic abuse against the major to hostility stoked during Trump’s presidency

July 2025 During a golfing trip to Scotland, Trump calls Khan “a nasty person”

Sept 2025 Trump blames Khan for London’s “stabbings and the dirt and the filth”.

Dec 2025 Trump suggests migrants got Khan elected, calls him a “horrible, vicious, disgusting mayor”