American sociologist and feminist scholar
Suzanna Danuta Walters is the director of the Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Program and professor of sociology at Northeastern University , Boston.[ 2] She is also the editor-in-chief of Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society [ 3] [ 4] and the author of several books, including The Tolerance Trap: How God, Genes, and Good Intentions are Sabotaging Gay Equality .[ 5] [ 6] [ 7] She is the author of the op-ed "Why can't we hate men?" in The Washington Post .[ 8] [ 9] [ 10]
^ a b Walters, Suzanna Danuta (1990). Lives together/worlds apart: Mothers and daughters in popular culture (Ph.D.). Graduate Center, CUNY . OCLC 23706659 . ProQuest 303831822 .
^ "Suzanna Danuta Walters: College of Social Sciences and Humanities" . northeastern.edu . Northeastern University .
^ Danuta Walters, Suzanna (Spring 2015). "Inaugural editorial: thinking and doing feminism". Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society . 40 (3): 539–544. doi :10.1086/680025 . JSTOR 680025 . S2CID 146463651 . Text.
^ "Signs: Editorial board" . journals.uchicago.edu . University of Chicago Press . Retrieved 31 January 2016 .
^ Danuta Walters, Suzanna (2014). The tolerance trap: how God, genes, and good intentions are sabotaging gay equality . New York: New York University Press . ISBN 9780814770573 .
^ Bindel, Julie (28 August 2014). "The Tolerance Trap review – what happened to the kick-ass gay rights movement?" . The Guardian . Guardian Media Group . Retrieved 31 January 2016 .
^ Simpson, Mark (17 July 2014). "The Tolerance Trap by Suzanna Danuta Walters, book review: A book that asks "should the gay community aim for 'normality'"?" . The Independent . Independent Print Ltd. Retrieved 31 January 2016 .
^ Danuta Walters, Suzanna (8 June 2018). "Why can't we hate men?" . The Washington Post | Opinion . Archived from the original on 10 June 2018. Retrieved 10 June 2018 .
^ Friedersdorf, Conor (2018-06-11). "What One Professor's Case for Hating Men Missed" . The Atlantic. Retrieved 2018-06-13 . It is always illogical to hate an entire group of people for behavior perpetrated by a subset of its members and actively opposed or renounced by literally millions of them.
^ Kafka, Alexander C. (19 June 2018). "A Scholar Asked, 'Why Can't We Hate Men?' Now She Responds to the Deluge of Criticism" . The Chronicle of Higher Education . Retrieved 15 August 2018 .