Last days at hot slit The radical feminism of Andrea Dworkin

Andrea Dworkin

Book - 2019

"Radical feminist author Andrea Dworkin was a caricature of the manhater in the popular imagination as well as a polarizing figure within the women's movement, infamous for her antipornography stance in the 1970s and 1980s. Now, more than a decade after her death, this timely collection of her writing showcases the prescience of her analyses: of the genocidal character of sexual violence; of the devastating nihilism of white male supremacy, and of the toll it takes--especially on those who resist. This rediscovery of Dworkin's work will serve as a flashpoint for crucial feminist conversations today. Why is the cost of speaking out against abuse and inequality still so high? Why is the problematic work of brilliant women force...d into oblivion, when that of flawed great men is embraced? What can we learn from the bitter divisions and discarded ideas of previous generations?"--Page 4 of cover.

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305.42/Dworkin
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Location Call Number   Status
2nd Floor 305.42/Dworkin Due May 6, 2024
Subjects
Published
South Pasadena, CA : Semiotext(e) [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Andrea Dworkin (author)
Item Description
Series from publisher's website.
Physical Description
407 pages ; 21 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 395-403).
ISBN
9781635900804
  • Introduction / by Johanna Fateman
  • Postcard to Mom and Dad, 1973
  • Woman hating, 1974: The herstory ; Androgyny ; Woman as victim : "Story of O" ; Afterword: The great punctuation typography struggle
  • Our blood, 1976: Renouncing sexual equality, 1974 ; The rape atrocity and the boy next door, 1975
  • Letter to Mom and Dad, 1978
  • Letters from a war zone, 1988: A battered wife survives, 1978
  • Pornography : men possessing women, 1979-1989: Power ; Men and boys ; Pornography ; Whores
  • Right-wing women, 1983: The promise of the ultra-right
  • Letters from a war zone, 1988: I want a twenty-four-hour truce during which there is no rape
  • Ruins, 1978-1983: Goodbye to all this, 1983
  • Ice and fire, 1986
  • Intercourse, 1987-1995: Preface to second edition ; Occupation/collaboration
  • Mercy, 1990: Chapter 6: In June 1967 (age 20)
  • Life and death, 1997: My life as a writer, 1995 ; In memory of Nicole Brown Simpson, 1994-1995 ; Israel : whose country is it anyway?, 1990
  • My suicide, 1999.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Two editors join forces to produce an anthology of works by a controversial second-wave feminist.Andrea Dworkin (1946-2005) achieved notoriety in the 1980s as "an iconic figure of so-called anti-sex feminism." Musician and art critic Fateman and Lambda Literary board president Scholder attempt to offer a complete portrait of Dworkin's oeuvre by bringing together selections from both her famous theoretical and lesser-known literary works. The editors begin with essays taken from Woman Hating (1974). Each piece reveals Dworkin's core concerns that "the nuclear family and ritualized sexual behavior imprison [women] in roles and forms which are degrading to [them]" and that manhood is predicated on the enactment of (sexual) violence against women. Selections from Our Blood (1976) show Dworkin in dialogue with other second-wave feminists and in particular, her fellow militants, Kate Millett and Shulamith Firestone. Those pieces drawn from Pornography (1981) find Dworkin theorizing that pornography is a savage "genre" concerned with depicting all aspects of "male power." Fateman and Scholder also gather excerpts from Intercourse (1987), a book concerned with "the sexed world of dominance and submission." Although Dworkin was a published poet, the editors focus on her prose efforts. They include autobiographical writings such as "My Life as a Writer" (1995) and "My Suicide" (1999), a devastating unpublished account of how Dworkin was drugged and raped in a Paris hotel. The editors also offer selections from two fictional works, Ice and Fire (1986) and Mercy (1991), which portray protagonists who suffer horrific personal injustice at the hands of men and patriarchal society. Fateman and Scholder's anthology is useful as a primer on works by a figure consigned to the radical fringe of feminist discourse, but its no-holds-barred accounts of misogynistic brutality and uncensored expressions of female rage do not make it a book for the faint of heart.Intense reading most likely to appeal to radical feminist scholars. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.