The new book from the New York Times bestselling author of The Three Mothers.
In Erased, Anna Malaika Tubbs recovers all that American patriarchy has tried to destroy.
Across the world, patriarchy has oppressed women and denied their contributions, but every nation has its own unique gendered hierarchy. Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs applies her signature approachable yet rigorous analysis to define American patriarchy in this definitive and groundbreaking history. Humanity in the United States is determined by gender in a limited and flawed binary logic that is also always tied to whiteness. Tubbs shows how a fabricated hierarchy became so deeply ingrained in the country over time that it now goes unnoticed, along with everything it intentionally conceals.
From the founding fathers to the current Supreme Court justices, from the treatment of enslaved women to the American maternal health crisis, from the exclusion of women in the Constitution to the continued lack of an Equal Rights Amendment, Tubbs brings together academic research, the stories of freedom fighters both past and present, and her own experiences to reveal what is erased in the wake of American patriarchy. The system has survived by hiding the tools that are necessary to dismantle it. But Tubbs beautifully reminds us that those tools, including our intuition, courage, ancient wisdom, and power, are still well within our reach.
Erased is the story of the United States from a new one where the people who shaped this country—who have been oppressed and whose contributions have been denied—are at the center, reminding us that we can restore what has been strategically kept from us. Once again, Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs has written a book that will be a touchstone for conversations on gender, race, and equity for years to come.
This was a very difficult read for me. I am a product of the 50's., with a working career from the 70's and beyond. I delt with the patriarchy most of my life. I fought and kicked my way to the "glass ceiling" only to be held back by my fellow white male worker with less education and experience. This book brought back some very harsh memories, made me feel sad. I also understand the authors push for people of color but felt quite overwhelmed by being reminded in every chapter. I felt where she was coming from, just way too much overload. The author did disclose some very interesting statistics and historical events. Some were new to me, others not. Chapter 25, Our Vision of New Possibilities was exceptional, it gave me some hope for future generations. it explains what's wrong with American Patriarchy - Fear! I feel the information in this book is for a very specific group of readers, certainly not male, white, anglo's because they are the main grippes of who we are trying to complain about. As a retired female I could have used this information to my benefit many years ago, but it's too late for me. As for the comment "things do not have to be this way," I agree, however the "Man" has the control and I do not ever foresee that changing in the near future by looking at how the typical males act in society today. I'm glad I read this book but half way through I got so depressed that I could only read a little at a time to be able to finish it. Anna Malaika Tubbs writes it as it is, wish I had known her years ago! Thanks Book Browse for sending this book!
The beginning of this book is fantastic. It does a great job of being an introduction to the various impacts of patriarchy. However, I was concerned by the section on transphobia. Tubbs uses what I would consider a very harmful narrative for why people are transphobic. This is the same narrative that is pressed by the poet/comedian Alok which posits that people are transphobic because they envy not being able to be their full selves and that they are in pain. This is incredibly myopic and dangerous because it simplifies bigotry. While there are probably a few cases where this is true, bigotry overall is more complicated. Hate is not a one size fits all. This narrative leaves out an important aspect of hate, namely disgust. It is also confusing because no other form of bigotry is described this way. Racism is not framed as white people being envious of black people. Abelism is not framed as able bodied people being envious of disabled people. It also turns the focus away from the harm being done to gender nonconforming people. Trans people are literally being murdered. I was also alarmed that Tubbs brought up divine feminine and masculine because this, no matter how you spin it, reinforces the gender binary. As a queer disabled person, I was also alarmed that Tubbs praised "The Body Keeps the Score" since it is widely known in the trauma community to be written by a man who does not care for traumatized people and is sexist. Overall, while I think much of what Erased discusses is valuable I disagree with a few sections and the overall premise that American patriarchy is somehow noticeably different from other countries, given that patriarchy has been around for so long and the Founding Fathers brought it with them from Europe (especially England). I disagree that it is patriarchy that is the root problem and instead would argue it is capitalism and greed that requires the reinforcing of patriarchy, racism, transphobia, abelism etc because accumulating wealth requires exploitation.
3.75 stars. So much of this book is critical information. General society doesn’t often think about how enmeshed patriarchy is with every aspect of our lives, especially if you are a woman or POC. How even things that seem mundane can have originated from a need from the majority to dominate.
That being said, I felt the author took too many broad strokes with some conclusions, particularly involving religion. There was an obvious bias against any faith. There were also views she held that were just diametrically opposed to my own Christian beliefs. I’m on the progressive side, so I fully believe we should understand how humans have taken patriarchal models and absolutely ruined them and manipulated them into something ugly, but that doesn’t mean that any and all faith teachings are inherently suppressive.
Her views on being hyper vigilant over children and their influences seemed extreme. Of course, we should be diligent and intentional with how our children interpret the world around them in their formative years, but some of her examples seemed to spread into being neurotically over analytical (we can’t even enjoy The Lion King now??).
Finally, it was just a smidge long winded. I think we could have made the same impact with 100 or so less pages.
Overall, if you are able to dive in with some time to process well and sift through her bullet points, anecdotes, and the history, it’s a good read to add to your TBR.
I received a complimentary copy of this from NetGalley in exchange for sharing my honest thoughts.
Sorry to say it was not as engaging as I hoped. Some sections were better than others. Her points were certainly valid and some were notable. Maybe it was just the writing style that was tough for me to get into and stay focused. Sentences were often really long. I don’t regret reading it because of the points I needed to stay present with me, just was hoping for something I could not put down. This just was not that.
I read a lot about patriarchy, white evangelicalism, Christian nationalism. This book goes right along with these topics, but specifically the great loss to society from erasing and/or banning women from so much. Patriarch's quest for control over women has come to a great cost for all, including themselves. We are a resurgence of this now in the USA, with the supreme court, with laws being put in place by the President, by removing human rights from women.
This book is important and timely. I hope many read it.
I was so excited to receive this book in the Goodreads giveaway, as I am a political junkie and love reading non-fiction books. There was so much great information in here, if you can call depressing information about the American Patriarchy great (still, very important to learn). There were just way too many 'I' and 'we' statements, though. Just took away from the book.
Besides that, another person brought it up in their review, but people aren't just transphobic because they are jealous of trans people. That's like saying every homophobic person is secretly gay. That type of hate is usually something that is a learned behavior. So ingrained in their psyche, passed down through generations.
What American Patriarchy Has Hidden from Us by Anna Malaika Tubbs (book cover is in image) articulates the impact of how US gendered hierarchy and it's patriarchy has contributed to the masking of women's contributions and impacts to American history. Tubbs describes how a binary view of gender and its to whiteness has become so ingrained in the American psyche that it is not even noticed.
Narrated by the author, this book covers the themes of gender, race and equality. It feels well researched, but takes a dual tone of academic prose and political lecture, which I believe will limit the audience. I believe it would be better received if it was written in a more natural language. Nonetheless it is a great approach to the topic and I highly recommend.
Thank you to Macmillan Audio and NetGalley for the opportunity to listen to this book. All opinions are my own.
Cannot say enough about this book, by a young woman one-third my age!
Ms. Tubbs correctly diagnoses the painful symptoms of patriarchy, a patriarchy that I as a nonconforming straight white woman struggled through decade after decade.
Before it was acceptable I chose to remain childless--and paid a steep price.
As a divorced childless woman without children but with a college education I was punished by employers, not rewarded. Being overqualified stunted job growth and promotion. I was a threat to leadership, ridiculous as it seems.
Disgusted, I went to truck driving school, even worse, sweatshops on wheels paired with creepy men.
As a non-reproducing female, was always treated as an outsider--in the family and workplace.
Dating and marriage was abysmal, survived two abusers and a contemptuous husband. One abuser broke my back and got me pregnant (abortion pre-Roe courtesy mother, father never let me forget--for decades). The other abuser almost murdered me and I lost my job and had to flee my home town and then start all over.
Yes, some of this caused by dysfunctional parenting but much caused by PATRIARCHY.
Was a tomboy, ran a lot, identified as a runner before any gender identity. Realize now was running FROM patriarchy!
Always knew intrinsically why I did not fit in with American mainstream life, why my life was such a struggle, but never so clearly as after reading this extraordinary book.
Ms. Tubbs deserves a Pulitzer prize for this incredible work, it is a path out of hell--for all of us!
While the premise was interesting, unfortunately the book was super repetitive which made it dull to read. Perhaps it’s because the author has a PhD, but the book felt like a thesis paper. In the conclusion, she presents a vision of nirvana that was wholly divorced from the reality of the world we live in, and I wish she would have presented more practical examples of how to dismantle the patriarchal society we live in. Not my favorite.
Erased: What American Patriarchy Has Hidden from Us was a Macmillan Audio pick, and what I thought I knew about the patriarchy only touched the surface compared to what Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs revealed. I learned that each society or nation has its own form of patriarchy, and in the United States our brand is always tied to whiteness. This book was well-researched, well-explained, and so revealing; I think it is a must read for everyone.
Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs not only has the education, but she also has the particularly unique life experience of being the child of a white mother and Black father who traveled the world and was raised in different cultures while growing up to see through the lens of American patriarchy down to the truth. I really loved how eye-opening this book was. So many aspects of American patriarchy were not previously obvious to me, especially how it is bound to whiteness.
One of the most surprising aspects of this book was the advice on pregnancy, medical care for women, and mothering. These are not things one necessarily thinks of when thinking of patriarchy, but it exposes just how much American patriarchy has usurped the female role in her own anatomy and procreation!
After reading this book, I feel so much better equipped to combat everyday patriarchy, as well as racism. This book was absolutely 5 stars, and I appreciated Dr. Anna Malaika Tubbs narrating it herself!
Using examples from the distant past and very recent history, Tubbs articulates the flow of patriarchy and its various ramifications throughout society. Readers who think about this topic often, consciously experience its consequences and impacts, and engage in regular conversations about it will still find some good info here, especially in some of the modern applications and - on the other hand - some of the apt historical examples that may have been previously missed.
Tubbs uses her own life as a structural mechanism for this narrative, and for me, that was one of several engaging elements. I really appreciated the personal stories, insights, and intersectional connections Tubbs makes throughout. There is a clear personal touch here that makes this feel much more human and relevant than it might if the focus were the information instead of its impacts on specific individuals.
I was skeptical that I'd get much new info because I've done so much reading and teaching on this subject, but I did very much enjoy the listen and recommend the audio version when and where accessible.
*Special thanks to NetGalley and Macmillan Audio for this arc, which I received in exchange for an honest review. The opinions expressed here are my own.
Books on this topic are often difficult to digest — full of complex theory, rhetoric, and philosophical arguments. This book is different. It’s written in a totally accessible way, enabling anyone who has an interest in this topic to pick it up and read it cover to cover without getting “lost in the weeds.”
I love how the author draws on her own personal experiences as well as the experiences of both well-known and little known characters throughout history in order to create a compelling and engaging narrative about the problematic ways patriarchy has been woven through every layer of the U.S.’s evolution, from the initial pilfering of indigenous lands to the active implementation of the Project 2025 playbook.
Even though the scope of this book is a bit broad, it’s still a powerful and necessary work of historical and cultural critique. It would make the perfect first step for someone diving into studying gender, intersectional feminism, and the patriarchy. In this book, Anna Malaika Tubbs takes on a VERY ambitious task: examining how systems of power shape the stories we tell about history and who gets remembered within them. While the book covers a wide range of topics, from law and culture, to media and family structures, Tubbs thoughtfully weaves them together in a way that remains compelling.
This book really hammers home that the absence of women from historical narratives is rarely accidental. Tubbs demonstrates how social systems, institutions, and cultural storytelling have consistently minimized or overlooked women’s contributions, particularly those of Black women. The research is strong, the writing is accessible, and the argument builds in a way that invites readers to reconsider what they thought they knew about American history.
What makes the book especially effective is its balance of scholarship and readability. Tubbs presents complex historical and social ideas in a clear and engaging way, without sacrificing depth. This makes the book feel intellectually grounded and emotionally resonant. This book is not only about correcting the historical record, but about understanding how power shapes memory itself. It’s a thoughtful and important book that encourages readers to question whose stories have been preserved and whose have been pushed aside. 5 stars.
Anna Malaika Tubbs covers a lot of ground here in describing the history and present foundational influence of Patriarchy as a shaping factor in America. Different parts focus on different aspects of the ways women's histories, impacts, contributions, and voices have been erased or minimalised in mainstream history. Many important points here, mostly stories I was familiar with but extra details for example about Sacagawea and other women, particilarly indigenous and non-white women in US history.
she's a great researcher and connector and leads with her deaire for a brighter, better future with less patriarchy. Some chapters are better than others, and while I found her memoir contributions a plus to learning how she came to her perspectives, particularly through her reflections on her mother's history
The main issue is that the language doesn't invite in those readers who most need to broaden their understanding of US history.... I will continue to follow and read her works, this is different than Three Mothers, with a similar sensitivity to the power, influence and impact of women, and mothers on US history
One of those books that leaves you feeling equal parts enlightened and furious.
Tubbs carefully lays out how patriarchy has shaped American history, laws, and culture—often erasing the contributions and experiences of women and marginalized people along the way. Through historical examples, research, and personal insight, she shows how systems of power were intentionally built to keep authority concentrated among a privileged few. (Barnes & Noble)
Reading this made me angry in the best way. Page after page highlights how much has been hidden, rewritten, or ignored in the stories we’re taught about our country. It’s eye-opening and deeply frustrating to realize how normalized these systems are.
At the same time, the book is empowering. Tubbs doesn’t just expose the problem—she encourages readers to recognize it and start dismantling it. It’s a challenging, thought-provoking read that will likely leave you seeing history, politics, and everyday life a little differently.
If you’re ready for a book that will make you think—and maybe make your blood boil a little—this one is worth picking up.
There exists an issue with the word. It's a bad word now. I doesn't mean to be, nor does anyone using the word as a part of their identity mean to cause harm with it. But no matter how you feel about it, being "woke" means being behind the latest state very quickly. For example, though published in 2025, this book is missing the nuance of using a term like FNMI+ (First Nations, Metis, Inuit, plus) instead of "Indigenous". That's fine, though, because that precedent also changed in Late 2025. What's NOT fine, is when someone who is not a part of a community, uses their angst and frustration to speak on behalf of another. Every time this book mentions women and black culture (and the odd oil-to-water mixture found in the US) it is enlightening, empowering and eye-opening. It's when these moments bleed into speaking about Queer/Trans or FNMI+ communities that the message becomes really painfully misrepresented and under-researched by several years, not just a few months. Could have made this a short, but massively effective read that instead felt preachy with a prose that goes on a page or two, too long every chapter.
Ever wonder how to successfully use your sociology or gender studies degree? I loved this book! I found it after listening to an interview with the author on a podcast and Tubbs' audio narration is perfection.
Filled with heavy, yet necessary topics, the few preachy moments didn't bother me. They were partnered with history (past and present), and real life examples. Sure, the patriarchy...but if we don't talk honestly about the systems that are fighting to oppress us, aren't we also part of the problem??
Well written and researched book about the history of American Patriarchy and its impacts. It would be a better confirmation of beliefs about feminism and anti-racism than to help introduce the ideas. The only reason I deducted a star is that I don’t feel I can hand it to my right leaning friends and family without explanation.
I'm not sure who the author considers her audience for this one. Most people I know who exist within the range between neolib/moderate to conservative would DNF this one early on. They'd put it down immediately upon reading the author's emphatic yet unsubstantiated assertions about figures like Jefferson and Lincoln. She did not provide enough evidence within the text for any of her assertions (which are very likely true) and the notes were surprisingly spare as well. To overcome the massive hurdle that is the standard American public school education (or even the standard private/homeschool education for those within the range specified) which has long fought to instill a worshipful kind of reverence for the "founding fathers" in every student, a lot of very strong evidence needs to be presented. That evidence was profoundly absent here.
If that group, to which the overwhelming majority of American women belong, somehow is not the audience she studied in order to be able to reach, then perhaps she addressed her argument to the rest of us, i.e. progressives? Well, there's little reason to think so. Nothing in the book was new information to the educated and progressive book club I read the book with, and the book was presented in a style that presumed its contents surely would be.
Early on the author passionately presented her goal in writing this book. She wanted to finally, once and for all, lay the evidence of American Patriarchy all out in such straightforward, black & white terms, that it could not be disbelieved or hand-waved away any longer. The way she presented this goal reminded me of T. Jefferson's explanation of his goal in penning the Declaration of Independence: "[...] to place before mankind the common sense of the subject; in terms so plain and firm as to command their assent."
It was this mission statement that got me to recommend this book to my book club in the first place. I was actually pumped to read it. Not because I expected to learn anything new, necessarily, but I wanted to enjoy the breath of fresh air that is a highly detailed, yet plainspoken and matter-of-fact accounting of the interconnected whys and hows that create and reinforce immense systems of power. More than that, I wanted this to be a resource to refer back to again and again. I expected I'd be quoting from it, and that I'd want to donate copies to every neighborhood lending library. I anticipated foisting copies of it upon unsuspecting friends and neighbors, in the hopes that its distribution would spread like revolutionaries of history distributed *A Vindication of the Rights of Women*, *Common Sense*, and *The Communist Manifesto.*
So it's fair to say I really hoped she'd accomplish at least some part of her stated goal. I was very disappointed to find that she seemed to have completely forgotten that goal almost immediately.
It didn't help my disappointment that even when she remembered (on occasion) to address Patriarchy first and foremost as a system, she kept undermining that all-important framing by devoting the overwhelming majority of each chapter to anecdotes involving individuals. This is a problem because she presumably did research on her audience in order to be able to reach them. And from that she ought to have known that those folks have been taught, and they believe, that every form of bigotry and oppression is the fault and responsibility of individuals, not systems. But her predominant focus on the actions of individuals did nothing to address that harmful and insidious falsehood.
Not only did the approach of this book fail to address that belief that individuals bear responsibility for Patriarchy. But to a mind that hasn't been taught critical thinking, the "vibe" of the book actually plays right into that belief. This book will seem to such a person to live up to its stated goal, and yet it will have done very little to dismantle one of the most harmful assumptions that they brought with them. Because the only way to dismantle an assumption as broadly reaching as that one is to be meticulous, going piece by piece, leaving no room for any counterproductive ideas to sneak back in. I had every reason to believe at the start that she intended to be that meticulous. She plainly said that that was her intent.
So that's why I've given this review two stars instead of the higher score it might have received otherwise. The same is true of every type of relationship involving any degree of trust, whether it's between a doctor and patient, a plumber and homeowner, teacher and student, or author and reader: The greater *impression* of competence given, the greater disappointment when the one granted trust turns out to be no more worthy of it than any other person who casually makes claims without having already proved their work lives up to them. Too harsh? I don't think so. Not when this very well might be the only book about Patriarchy a lot of people ever pick up, and the stakes are as high as our basic human rights.
An excellent, gut wrenching book, one that I am thinking of purchasing for my daughter, daughter in law, and best friend. The author meticulously analyzed her thesis and wrote a book that assesses our history and urgently stresses a call to action and change.
Although the US and the world in general are organized under patriarchal societies, the information the author presents is neither new or insightful. Regrettably, the book is filled with regurgitated and repetive information. As a woman, I agree our current societal structure favors white men and marginalizes women and people of color. I also agree, better social programs, and educational and health care equality improve a society. However, chapter 24 sums up the biggest issue we face. People only care about things when it impacts them. In this chapter, which deals with climate change, the author points out the groups most concerned about climate change are the groups who will be impacted the most. That is, no matter the gender or color, people look out for themselves. Unfortunately, the author fails to draw this conclusion, but holds fast to the idea that the patriarchy is to blame for all the worlds problems, verse whoever holds the power and privilege (white men, women, people of color) want to retain that power and privilege at any cost. In order to achieve what the author proposes, and what has been proposed throughout history, requires people to always put others before themselves. In order to achieve the indoctrination and cultural changes the author is proposing, the memories of everyone in the world would need to be "erased". Undoubtedly, in the "alternative reality" the author proposes, someone will write a book suggesting resistance and change to that current situation.
Good and important information but read like I was listening to a college student’s thesis. Too dry to be really interesting. I DNF’ed it at about 30%.
Erased by Anna Malaika Tubbs is a well-written but emotionally heavy book. There’s no part of it that’s easy to digest. Tubbs methodically deconstructs how the U.S. has been built to uphold the patriarchy that created it. From foundational narratives like Lewis and Clark to modern examples like AI photo editing, she shows how these dynamics are woven into the fabric of everything.
The section on Sacagawea was immediately engaging and challenged me to rethink how I consume news and the stories we’re told. At the same time, it made me more critical of the book itself—a testament to how deeply Tubbs encourages critical thinking.
The most gut-wrenching part was Tubbs’s discussion of Anita Hill, Christine Blasey Ford, and Chanel Miller and their experiences with sexual assault. She drives home the point that despite decades between these cases, society still excuses harassment and assault—often rewarding perpetrators with power, including lifetime appointments to the Supreme Court. The indignation some feel when held accountable is especially disturbing.
I appreciated how Tubbs summarized each chapter and consistently tied her arguments back to the central thesis. These transitions kept the book cohesive and especially helpful in the audiobook version, where flipping back to reference earlier points wasn’t an option. Tubbs also does an excellent job narrating the audiobook herself.
This book aligned with my political views, but I often wondered how a conservative reader might react. Would they disagree with every point? Or at least find common ground in her critiques of the medical establishment and environmental impacts? Regardless, Tubbs makes a strong, well-supported case that urges readers to question widely accepted narratives—and that’s what will stick with me most: question the narrative. I’ll definitely be following Tubbs’s work in the future.
Thank you to Macmillan audio and NetGalley for the arc
While this was very informative and definitely shows readers just how prevalent the patriarchy is ingrained in us, especially at such young ages, it was quite repetitive at times.
Personal anecdotes were also used throughout this in order to further enhance the experience of a POC woman, specifically a black woman, in a world catered towards white men. Readers were also giving specific examples, such as Kathrine Switzer and her courageous effort in being the first woman to run a marathon, Ellen Craft who was an enslaved woman who pretended to be a white passing man in order to be free, Sacajawea and her incredible knowledge in helping and aiding men as a young mother, and Anita Hill who bravely spoke up about her struggles over Clarence Thomas.
Seeing how prevalent and deep rooted white patriarchy is in society, especially the United States, was disappointing yet not surprising. What was interesting to learn how much white women try and distance themselves as much as possible from other POC women in order to better fit in with white men, even though white men have created spaces and barriers that do not not allow them. The divide is prevalent and doesn’t seem to get much smaller.
While I do believe this could’ve been more concise, as it felt repetitive towards the end, it was also eye opening but even more so for those who are not POC. I encourage those who want to challenge themselves and the way they think.
Thank you to Flat Iron Publishing for the ARC. #flatironpartner
In the wake of Charlie Kirk’s murder and what feels like the current constant threat about speaking ill of a man who did a lot to hold up American Patriarchy, this book feels so important but also so incredibly hopeful.
It’s definitely a book that will get some people, specifically white women*, in their feelings. If they haven’t unpacked the myth of America, it can hurt at times. Even as someone who knows “we were founded on equality” is a fucking lie, sometimes it sucks to see it laid out as it is.
But the way the book spends an entire section on “well now what” when similar books that tackle these sort of topics save “now what” for their conclusion? That’s what makes this book so incredible. Normally, you end in a hopeless place with some ideas of what can happen moving forward but Tubbs masterfully makes sure that a section is just spent on the future, one what we can do. On the lessons we can learn.
Incredibly moving and powerful stuff
* hi, it’s me. I’m white women. I’m pretty far into my antiracism journey, but it still sucks to be reminded that we’re a BIG problem. But we really need to gather our friends, sisters, mothers, aunts, and co-workers and push them to hear these stories. Because we are in community with white women, as we are white women, our voices carry more weight. We need to do the work. But it’s okay to have big feelings. That’s what journaling is for.
Sums up what most women have lived. Until we break the death sentence of a sitting president of the United States being permitted to call a professional woman journalist, “piggy”, we are not going to have hope for the future. Generations have fought the stereotype and yet in 2025 not one of those other journalists present when the insult of “Piggy” was used got up and left!! Where is our sense of decency and respect gone?!