Become a Member
Books

'We still need each other'

The woman who has some men quaking in their boots tells J P O'Malley that all they have to do is adjust

November 30, 2012 10:51
Hanna Rosin

ByAnonymous, Anonymous

2 min read

Hanna Rosin wants to point out, right from the start of the interview, that her latest book, The End of Men, is not — as many have claimed — a feminist manifesto for the 21st century.

“Maybe it’s the cover,” she suggests, “which is yellow-and-pink. But it’s really not about that. In the United States, and other countries, large sections of society are becoming matriarchies. Nobody wants that. Men and women do need each other.”

Rosin was born in Israel in 1970 and moved with her family to New York four years later. She studied comparative literature at Stanford University and became a journalist soon afterwards, writing for a number of publications, including The New Republic, the Washington Post, and the Atlantic Monthly, where she is currently a senior editor. She now lives in Washington DC with her husband David Plotz — the editor of Slate — and their three children.

“We celebrate all Jewish holidays and my children attend Hebrew school. Although we are not what you would call Orthodox, Judaism is very important to us as a family,” says Rosin.