‘This Is the Blind Spot in Extremism Research’: Cynthia Miller-Idriss on Misogyny, Gender and Violence

Ignoring misogyny has left a gaping hole in how we understand political violence.

Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer arrives to greet President Donald Trump before he speaks to Air National Guard Troops on April 29, 2025, at Selfridge Air National Guard Base. (Scott Olson / Getty Images)

A conversation with sociologist Cynthia Miller-Idriss about her new book Man Up, on misogyny, gendered violence and political extremism. Read an excerpt from Man Up here.


Things are changing, but by and large, the field still doesn’t get it. 

Cynthia Miller-Idriss

Jackson Katz: At one point you considered calling your new book “Just Grab the Bitch,” a statement made by one of the militia members during the foiled the 2020 plot to kidnap Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer. How and why did you end up choosing Man Up

Cynthia Miller-Idriss: I lobbied hard for “Just Grab the Bitch,” in part because my overall goal in this book is to make the invisible visible, and it seemed like that title would force people to look at the issue head on. But of course, there was a big debate in marketing about whether such a harsh title would turn possible readers away.

The publisher did a survey of independent booksellers to test the title, and it was completely split, 50/50, love/hate. In the end, the words of one of the booksellers who hated it really stuck with me: “Why would we center the words of these violent men?” That pretty much did it for me, and I thought that centering the messages that boys and men get about the need to be dominant, aggressive and ready to be violent—to man up—would much more clearly situate this issue: as not just one of hatred or violence against women, but of how all of us experience gender policing in ways that shape our behavior, relationships and propensity to violence.