
Right Side Up Podcast with Danielle Strickland For the Love of Women: Uprooting and Healing Misogyny in Our World
Feb 11, 2026
Dorothy Greco, author and commentator on gender, faith, and culture, shares her life in male-dominated spaces and why she wrote For the Love of Women. She examines misogyny across healthcare, church, and institutions. Conversation covers men learning to listen, cultural and scriptural misreadings, institutional cover-ups, and practical steps for raising respectful sons and fostering change.
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Tomboy Roots Shaped A Lifelong Calling
- Dorothy Greco grew up a tomboy in a poor, parochial farming community and repeatedly felt criticized for not fitting feminine stereotypes.
- That lifelong experience shaped her work on misogyny and informed her decision to write For the Love of Women.
Misogyny As A Systemic Principle
- Greco defines misogyny as the persistent belief that men's ideas and needs matter more and systems should uphold that principle.
- She maps its effects across six spheres: health care, workplace, government, media, intimate relationships, and the church.
Personal Health Struggles Reveal Systemic Dismissal
- Dorothy recounts 25 years of chronic health issues and frequent dismissal by doctors who labeled symptoms as psychological.
- She links this pattern to medicine's male dominance and the historical displacement of female healers like midwives.



