- Michelle Goldberg
- New York TimesUpdated: Oct 6, 2022, 14:57 IST IST
In the US and elsewhere, males are falling behind in schools and struggling to land jobs. The resulting resentment could fuel right-wing populist movements around the world
Many years ago, I went to a nail salon at an upscale mall in Kampala, Uganda, and was surprised that almost everyone working there was male. When I asked one of the employees why this was, he explained that doing nails was men’s work because it paid well. The salon wasn’t unique; as one local newspaper put it, “There is no visitor that comes to Uganda and won’t notice and comment about the young men carrying a basket in their hand with a manicure set.”
I thought of those male manicurists while reading Richard V Reeves’ much-discussed new book, Of Boys and Men: Why the Modern Male Is Struggling, Why It Matters, and What to Do About It. Reeves writes about the myriad ways boys and men, particularly in America, are flailing: Many are falling behind in school, disconnected from family, vulnerable to opioid abuse and to deaths of despair. He believes, I think rightly, that it is important to recruit more men into fast-growing industries now dominated by women, particularly health and education.
I thought of those male manicurists while reading Richard V Reeves’ much-discussed new book, Of Boys and Men: Why the Modern Male Is Struggling, Why It Matters, and What to Do About It. Reeves writes about the myriad ways boys and men, particularly in America, are flailing: Many are falling behind in school, disconnected from family, vulnerable to opioid abuse and to deaths of despair. He believes, I think rightly, that it is important to recruit more men into fast-growing industries now dominated by women, particularly health and education.