Free Women, Free Men

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Free Women, Free Men Page 29

by Camille Paglia

Savio, Mario, ref1. See also Free Speech Movement

  Scavullo, Francesco, ref1

  Schlafly, Phyllis, ref1

  Schroeder, Patricia, ref1, ref2

  Scott, Melody Thomas, ref1

  Scott, Sir Walter, ref1

  Sebastian, Saint, ref1

  Sex and the City, ref1, ref2

  sex education, ref1

  sexual harassment, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7. See also rape

  Shakespeare, William, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8

  Shalit, Wendy, ref1

  Shearer, Norma, ref1

  Sinatra, Frank, ref1, ref2

  Sirk, Douglas, ref1

  Smith, Anna Nicole, ref1

  Smith, Bessie, ref1

  Smith, Patti, ref1, ref2, ref3

  Smith College, ref1, ref2

  soap opera, ref1, ref2

  Sommers, Christina Hoff, ref1, ref2

  Sontag, Susan, ref1

  Sophocles, ref1, ref2

  Spears, Britney, ref1

  Spice Girls, ref1

  sports, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Springfield, Dusty, ref1

  Stanfill, Francesca, ref1, ref2, ref3

  Steinem, Gloria, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15

  Steiner, Max, ref1

  stiletto heel, ref1

  stockyards, careerist, ref1

  Stone, Sharon, ref1, ref2

  Storr, Anthony, ref1

  Stowe, Harriet Beecher, ref1, ref2

  Streisand, Barbra, ref1

  surgery, plastic, ref1

  Swinburne, Algernon Charles, ref1

  Tannen, Deborah, ref1

  Taylor, Elizabeth, ref1, ref2, ref3

  Tereshkova, Valentina, ref1

  Thatcher, Margaret, ref1, ref2

  Thomas, Clarence, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  Thompson, Dorothy, ref1, ref2

  throw, stone’s, ref1. See also Harvard University

  Tiegs, Cheryl, ref1

  Tiresias, ref1

  tissue, trendy, ref1

  Titian, ref1

  Title IX, ref1, ref2

  Tom of Finland, ref1

  transgenderism, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  Trump, Donald, ref1, ref2

  Turner, Lana, ref1, ref2

  Tutankhamen, ref1

  Twilight Zone, The, ref1

  United Nations Conference on Women, Beijing, ref1, ref2

  University of the Arts, ref1, ref2, ref3

  urination, ref1, ref2, ref3

  vagina dentata, ref1

  Velvet Underground, ref1

  Vendler, Helen, ref1

  Venus of Willendorf, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7

  Viagra, ref1, ref2

  Visconti, Luchino, ref1, ref2

  Vreeland, Diana, ref1

  Wagner, Richard, ref1

  Walker, Rebecca, ref1

  Warhol, Andy, ref1, ref2

  Wayne, John, ref1

  Weill, Kurt, ref1

  Weiss, Margot, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7

  Welch, Raquel, ref1

  West, Mae, ref1

  Whelan, Ella, ref1, ref2

  Whitman, Christine Todd, ref1, ref2

  Whitman, Walt, ref1, ref2

  Wilde, Oscar, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9

  Williams, Tennessee, ref1

  Wolf, Naomi, ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7

  Wollstonecraft, Mary, ref1, ref2, ref3

  Woodhull, Victoria, ref1, ref2

  Woolf, Virginia, ref1, ref2

  Wordsworth, William, ref1, ref2, ref3

  Woronov, Mary, ref1

  Yale University, ref1, ref2, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15

  York, Susannah, ref1

  PREVIOUS PUBLICATION INFORMATION

  “Sex and Violence, or Nature and Art” originally published as part of Chapter One of Sexual Personae (Yale University Press, 1990). Copyright © 1990 by Yale University.

  “The Venus of Willendorf” and “Nefertiti” originally published as parts of Chapter Two of Sexual Personae (Yale University Press, 1990). Copyright © 1990 Yale University.

  “Madonna: Animality and Artifice” originally appeared in The New York Times as “Madonna—Finally a Real Feminist” on December 14, 1990.

  “Rape and Modern Sex War” originally appeared in New York Newsday as “Rape: A Bigger Danger than Feminists Know” on January 27, 1991.

  “Junk Bonds and Corporate Raiders: Academe in the Hour of the Wolf” originally appeared in Arion (Spring 1991).

  “The MIT Lecture: Crisis in the American Universities” was originally a lecture delivered on September 19, 1991 at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts.

  “The Strange Case of Clarence Thomas and Anita Hill” originally appeared in The Philadelphia Inquirer as “Hill Is Neither Victim Nor a Feminist Hero” on October 21, 1991.

  “The Nursery School Campus: The Corrupting of the Humanities in the U.S.” originally appeared in The Times Literary Supplement on May 22, 1992.

  “The Return of Carry Nation: Catharine MacKinnon and Andrea Dworkin” originally appeared in Playboy (October 1992).

  “A White Liberal Women’s Conference” originally appeared in The New York Times on September 1, 1995.

  “Loose Canons” originally appeared in The Observer Review (London) on October 8, 1995.

  “Men’s Sports Vanishing” originally appeared in USA Today on April 9, 1996.

  “Coddling Won’t Elect Women, Toughening Will” originally appeared in USA Today on November 12, 1996.

  “Academic Feminists Must Begin to Fulfill Their Noble, Animating Ideal” originally appeared in The Chronicle of Higher Education on July 25, 1997.

  “Gridiron Feminism” originally appeared in The Wall Street Journal on September 12, 1997.

  “The Modern Battle of the Sexes” was originally a lecture delivered on December 1, 1997 as part of a series titled “Sounding the Century” at Queen Elizabeth Hall, London, and was subsequently broadcast by BBC Radio 3 on March 7, 1998.

  “American Gender Studies Today” originally appeared as “Symposium: American Gender Studies Today” in Women: A Cultural Review (U.K.), vol. 10, no. 2, 1999 (http://www.tandfonline.com/).

  “The Cruel Mirror: Body Type and Body Image as Reflected in Art” originally appeared in Art Documentation, vol. 23, no. 2, Fall 2004. © Art Libraries Society of North America.

  “The Pitfalls of Plastic Surgery” originally appeared in Harper’s Bazaar (May 2005).

  “Feminism Past and Present: Ideology, Action, and Reform” was originally a keynote address delivered on April 10, 2008 at a conference “The Legacy and Future of Feminism” at Harvard University, and subsequently published in Arion (Spring/Summer 2008).

  “No Sex Please, We’re Middle Class” originally appeared in The New York Times on June 27, 2010.

  “The Stiletto Heel” originally appeared as part of the online project “Design and Violence” by The Museum of Modern Art (http://designandviolence.moma.org/) on October 25, 2013, and was subsequently published in Design and Violence by The Museum of Modern Art, New York, in 2015.

  “Scholars in Bondage” originally appeared in The Chronicle Review of The Chronicle of Higher Education on May 24, 2013.

  “Gender Roles: Nature or Nurture” was originally delivered as the opening statement of a debate on October 8, 2013 at the Political Theory Institute in the School of Public Affairs at American University. Special thanks to Alan Levine and Thomas Merrill.

  “Are Men Obsolete?” was originally delivered as the opening statement of “The Munk Debate: Gender in the 21st Century” on November 15, 2013, and subsequently published in Are Men Obsolete? Rosin and Dowd vs. Moran and Paglia: The Munk Debate on Gender, edited by Rudyard Griffiths, copyright © 2014 by Aurea Foundation. Reprinted by permission o
f House of Anansi Press Inc., Toronto (www.houseofanansi.com).

  “Put the Sex Back in Sex Ed” originally appeared in Time on March 24, 2014.

  “It’s Time to Let Teenagers Drink Again” originally appeared in Time on May 19, 2014.

  “Cliquish, Tunnel-Vision Intolerance Afflicts Too Many Feminists” originally appeared in Feminist Times on July 14, 2014 (http://www.feministtimes.com/).

  “Southern Women: Old Myths and New Frontiers” was originally delivered as the Honors College Convocation Lecture on September 16, 2014 at Sally McDonnell Barksdale Honors College, University of Mississippi.

  “The Modern Campus Cannot Comprehend Evil” was originally published in Time (Time.com) on September 29, 2014.

  “Why I Love The Real Housewives” originally appeared on “The Daily Dish” (http://www.bravotv.com/the-daily-dish/news) on March 7, 2014. Special thanks to Bravo Media LLC.

  “What a Woman President Should Be Like” originally appeared in Time (Time.com) on July 13, 2015.

  “Feminist Trouble” originally appeared in Spiked Review (U.K.) in December 2015.

  “On Abortion” originally appeared in Salon (www.Salon.com) on April 7, 2016. An online version remains in the Salon archives. Reprinted with permission.

  “What’s in a Picture” originally appeared in Civilization: The Magazine of the Library of Congress (December 1996/January 1997).

  ILLUSTRATION CREDITS

  Bridgeman-Giraudon/Art Resource, N.Y.

  Foto Marburg/Art Resource, N.Y.

  Foto Marburg/Art Resource, N.Y.

  Patti Smith, 1975 © Robert Mapplethorpe Foundation

  Harry Benson/New York Media LLC

  Courtesy of Harry Benson

  Mario Ruiz/Getty Images

  © Steven Poole

  © Steven Poole

  © 1993 by John Callahan. Reprinted by permission. Gift of the artist.

  Robert Risko

  © 1994 Here Publishing. All rights reserved.

  Previously published in Girlfriends magazine. Reproduced with the permission of Diane Anderson-Minshall and Heather Findlay.

  ‘Luminously wise and deeply compassionate … A fierce and essential work’

  Helen Macdonald, author of H is for Hawk

  ‘Brilliant … Go on. Start walking. Get lost. Who knows what you’ll find’

  Guardian

  ‘Clement offers far more clues to the cryptic symbols which litter his paintings than any art critic could’

  The Times

 

 

 


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