Hounded
Women, Harms and the Gender Wars
1. Edition October 2024
208 Pages, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd
The last decade has seen countless cases of women being fired, disciplined, protested or no-platformed for their views on sex and gender. Whether high-profile celebrities or previously unknown feminists, such women's vocal non-belief in 'gender identity' as a universal human condition bears a high social cost. These 'houndings' are often presented starkly, clinically, in headlines or fleeting social media moments, stripped of the true cost of holding such beliefs.
But what is the reality behind the headlines and noise? What are the true consequences of holding - and living with - such seemingly now-heretical thoughts?
Hounded charts the often hidden and unspoken harms women face for prioritising and defending sex-based language and rights. Outlining the often-bewildering array of tactics used by opponents against such women, as well as the resilience required to refuse to be silenced, Lindsay presents a compelling argument for recognition of the individual and social harms that are being enacted under the auspices of 'gender identity activism.'
This debut non-fiction book by award-winning poet and essayist Jenny Lindsay, whose own 'hounding' offers a unique perspective, is a solid, sane, witty but also compassionate account about the very human cost of this extraordinary cultural and political schism.
Prologue
1 Core Beliefs and Their Consequences
2 Psychological Harms
3 Social Harms
4 Economic Harms
5 Democratic Harms
Conclusion: What If We're Right?
Notes
Jo Phoenix, University of Reading
"This passionate and beautifully written book is balm to the soul of those of us who, like the author, have suffered the distressing experience of being hounded because we dare to speak about the impact of being of the female sex. The personal and psychological cost of being one of those disagreeable women is very high. But as Lindsay makes abundantly clear, the cost of remaining silent is higher: the destruction of women's rights and of liberal democracy itself."
Helen Joyce, author of Trans: When Ideology Meets Reality
"A shocking compendium showing how women from all walks of life have been disenfranchised, ostracised, threatened, and worse for believing in the importance of biological sex, told in a compelling and compassionate way."
Kathleen Stock, author of Material Girls: Why Reality Matters for Feminism
"An excellent and profoundly angering analysis of the way in which women who have spoken out in the 'gender wars' have been punished. The costs to women documented here - where the punishment is always the process - will be familiar to far too many."
Sarah Pedersen, Robert Gordon University
"Jenny Lindsay's Hounded: Women, Harms and the Gender Wars is a reminder of why compassion is so vital for social justice work in a liberal democracy. Lindsay lays bare the dark side of the gender identity debates, exposing the damage caused by online smear campaigns, harassment, and violence targeting gender critical feminists. While I vehemently disagree with Lindsay and other gender critical feminists on sex, gender, and trans inclusion, we do not have to be on the same side to know that terrorizing those with differing beliefs is illiberal and dehumanizing. Hounded serves as a crucial wake-up call to the silencing impulses on the left that stifle meaningful debates, and the human cost of this silencing."
Caroline Heldman, Occidental College
"Herself a victim of hounding, Jenny Lindsay doesn't let her scars get in the way, and tells the sobering story of women who paid a disproportionate price for speaking out against gender identity ideology. Riveting and meticulously researched, Hounded is an unflinching diary of the gender wars."
Umut Özkirimli, IBEI (Institut Barcelona d'Estudis Internacionals) and Blanquerna University, author of Cancelled: The Left Way Back from Woke
"Jenny Lindsay's careful argument about the debate over gender identity theory is a model for progressive politics--passionate but carefully argued, and unstinting in its concern for women."
Robert Jensen, Emeritus Professor, University of Texas at Austin, author of It's Debatable: Talking Authentically about Tricky Topics