Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The Female Eunuch is a 1970 book by Germaine Greer that became an international bestseller and an important text in the feminist movement. Greer's thesis is that the "traditional" suburban, consumerist, nuclear family represses women sexually, and that this devitalizes them, rendering them eunuchs. The book was published in London in October 1970.
In 2005, the book was the second most banned and challenged book in the United States. [11] [12] In August 2024, it was one of 13 books banned statewide by Utah's state board of education, allegedly for its "objective sensitive material." [13] [14]
Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New Millennium, edited by Robin Morgan (2003) "The Feminist Ghost at the Conservative Political Action Conference", Joreen (2003) [473] "Women's Peace Activism: Forward into the Past?", Joreen (2003) [474] Not My Mother's Sister: Generational Conflict and Third-Wave Feminism, Astrid Henry (2004)
A Room of One's Own (1929) by Virginia Woolf, is noted in its argument for both a literal and figural space for women writers within a literary tradition dominated by patriarchy. Germaine Greer's The Female Eunuch (1970) questions the self-limiting role of the woman homemaker.
Sisterhood Is Forever: The Women's Anthology for a New Millennium, edited by Robin Morgan (2003) The Female Face of God in Auschwitz: A Jewish Feminist Theology of the Holocaust, Melissa Raphael (2003) "The Feminist Ghost at the Conservative Political Action Conference" (2003) [591] "Women's Peace Activism: Forward into the Past?", Joreen (2003 ...
Sexual Politics has been seen as a classic feminist text, said to be "the first book of academic feminist literary criticism", [1] and "one of the first feminist books of this decade to raise nationwide male ire", [14] though like Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique (1963) and Germaine Greer's The Female Eunuch (1970), its status has declined. [15]
Gustavson’s Eunuch Maker pay-per-view website shared footage of people undergoing “dangerous, unnecessary and life-changing surgeries” carried out in people’s homes, the court was told ...
In Jewish tradition, the term saris (Hebrew: סָרִיס, literally eunuch;) is a term used to refer to an individual assigned male at birth who has done one of the following: develop female characteristics; fail to reach sexual maturity by 20 years old [citation needed]; undergo castration.