Chris Williamson interviews Dr John Barry, a Chartered Psychologist and Professional Researcher, Co-Founder of The Centre for Male Psychology. They discuss how men and women both need help with their mental wellbeing, now more than ever. Yet there seems to be a particular blindness when it comes to men’s mental health and how to treat it, plus how to effectively communicate with men about their issues.

Does Psychology Have a Negative View of Men?
Chris Williamson interviews Dr John Barry, a Chartered Psychologist and Professional Researcher, Co-Founder of The Centre for Male Psychology. They discuss how men and women both need help with their mental wellbeing, now more than ever.
One response to “Does Psychology Have a Negative View of Men?”
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[…] While acknowledging that the #Me Too movement played a crucial role in exposing the serious sexual abuse of women, the report argues that it also led to the term ‘toxic masculinity’ gaining traction in public discourse. This, the report claims, enabled misandry to ‘creep into the mainstream’, with men being blamed for a wide range of ills in society (see this article on misandry in a therapy setting, and Dr John Barry’s interview about psychology’s problem with men). […]





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