This major study by a groundbreaking researcher has already been received with tremendous enthusiasm abroad, and Hite's books have sold over 20 million copies in 36 countries, including the United States. But with the 1987 publication of Women and Love, she became the victim of aggressive media hostility. In February 1994, Susan Faludi was quoted in the New York Times as saying, "The media practically fell all over themselves in their race to discredit Hite's . . . contrary and subversive political finding, and . . . succeeded in depoliticizing and silencing it by sweeping aside Hite's chorus of angry women and painting the bearer of the evidence herself as a long, angry woman instead."
In The Hite Report on the Family Hite challenges established views, arguing that the family is not collapsing but being democratized. Hite introduces a new theory of male eroticism by investigating why so many men and boys confuse sex and violence; she presents a lively new portrait of girls questioning their own sexual identity; and she confounds assumptions of a female "puberty" necessarily parallel to the male. Her questions are provocative and intimate: Do you know how your parents felt about having you? Did your father and mother look at pornography? At what age were your children closest to you? Do men raised by single mothers enjoy better relationships with women? Has children's respect for their mothers increased with the rise in single and employed mothers?
With The Hite Report of the Family Shere Hite lights the way to understanding change in the family as the constructive result of choice--not as a moral crisis, but as a successful evolution toward private democracy.