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What does it mean to be a man or a woman today? This question would have been unheard of a century ago. Women in Britain did not have the right to vote, could not enter many professions, could not hold property as wives, and were in effect the possessions of their husbands. Nowadays, to ask the question of the meaning of being a man or woman is criticized as being unfeminine or unmasculine—the question is a threat. For me, it is a life question, because the ‘gender crisis’ is having a major impact on organizations, on families and on one's social life.

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