Manon Garcia is a philosopher and professor at Freie Universität Berlin. She is the author of several books, including The Joy of Consent and We Are Not Born Submissive.
�Riveting, harrowing, and brilliant, Manon Garcia's Living with Men is indispensable reading for our times. A work of journalism, philosophy, and cultural criticism, it will help you to grapple not only with the mass rape case that gripped the world, but also the ordinariness of men's cruelty to women under patriarchy. An extraordinary book.� Kate Manne, Cornell University �A breathtaking tapestry of personal reflections, case details, and philosophical insights, Garcia has written the book we needed to make sense of the Pelicot trial and what it means for living with men.� Fiona Vera-Gray, Co-Director of the Child and Woman Abuse Studies Unit, London Metropolitan University �As she excavates the sobering details of the Pelicot trial, Manon Garcia shares the painful realization of what it all reveals about our (women�s) ongoing place in the world and the possibilities for stopping sexual violence. It is confronting and disturbing. But through personal reflections woven throughout the book, she walks alongside us, offering company, solidarity, and challenge: we see what is going on.� Nicola Gavey, University of Auckland �In Living with Men, Manon Garcia, one of the foremost feminist philosophers of her generation, delivers an unflinching and extremely insightful analysis of the trial of Dominique Pelicot and his 50 co-defendants a case that exposed the deep entrenchment of rape culture in French society. Blending courtroom observation with philosophical analysis and personal reflections, Garcia dismantles the notion that sexual violence is an aberration, showing instead how deeply it is woven into social norms and how inadequate the criminal law is in addressing it. Both a searing indictment of patriarchy and a profound work of feminist thought, this book is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the structures that make such violence possible.� Susan J. Brison, author of Aftermath: Violence and the Remaking of a Self