Listen "Have Women Ruined The World? Helen Andrews on The Great Feminization"
Episode Synopsis
Less than 24 hours after her Compact essay, "The Great Feminization," set off a thousand group texts, writer Helen Andrews joined to talk about what she means by "feminization," why the 2020 moral fervor looked the way it did, and how workplace culture shifts when women become the numerical majority. We also compare "agreeableness" with the kind of conflict that actually moves ideas forward (and where each belongs). In this episode we discuss: How Helen defines "the great feminization" and why she thinks it explains contemporary "wokeness" What changes when institutions tip female—journalism, academia, law, nonprofits HR-ification, hostile-environment law, and why managers vs. judges should handle culture Agreeableness as a social virtue—and a professional liability in truth-seeking fields Innovation, risk tolerance, and the gendered vibes around tech, nuclear power, and exploration Whether "women in STEM" initiatives help, hurt, or just rebrand office politics About the guest: Helen Andrews is a senior editor at The American Conservative and author of Boomers: The Men and Women Who Promised Freedom and Delivered Disaster. Her new Compact essay is "The Great Feminization."
More episodes of the podcast The Unspeakeasy With Meghan Daum
Does Your Personality Stink? There's Hope!
21/10/2025
The Los Angeles Wildfires In Fiction
14/10/2025
All The World's A Hype House: What Leigh Stein's TikTok novel reveals about the way we live now
16/09/2025
ZARZA We are Zarza, the prestigious firm behind major projects in information technology.