Lerner, Max, 208-9Lesbiansin / Love a Laddie, 37-44prohibiting recognition of eroticismof, 45-47relationship of, in male framework,129-33and Sade, 93See also HomosexualityLiberated womenin Whip Chick, 30-36as women of pornography, 208,209Lorenz, Konrad, 135Love, as violence, 52Love's Body (Brown), 51-52, 127Ludovici, Anthony M ., 109-10Lundberg, Ferdinand, 107-8Luther, M artin, on childbearing,54Machismo, 158, 162, 164Mademoiselle de Maupin (Gautier),109“Madonna/whore” catchwords,147-48Mahler, Margaret S., 105Mailer, Norm anon men as agents of death, 54-55on H enry Miller and women,48, 112Male perceptions of women, 62-67Male stlf, see SelfMalevolence of women, 96Mallow, Alex, 139, 141Manson, Charles, 17M arat, Jean-Paul, 78-79Marat/Sade (Weiss), 98Marcuse, H erberton beauty in female, 117on women, 127, 223Marriageas developed from rape, 19-20(see also Rape)owning and impregnating ofwomen in, 21-22rape as right in, 102, 103in Whip Chick, 33Masculinityas commitment to suicide andgenocide, 68and education of boys, 119 (seealso Boys)first rule of, 50force as confirming, 55 (see alsoForce)money as expressing, 20-22, 24mother subverting, 106Nazis setting new standard for,145punishment for failure of, 34race and, 157, 158 (see alsoRacism)and symbolic female, 128violence as criterion of, 5 3 (seealso Violence)Masochism, 149-51, 165Medusa, 117<strong>Men</strong>cken, H. L., Ill, 204Mermaid and the Minotaur, The(Dinnerstein), 65Metaphysical victim, 146-48, 153Mexicans, 155, 160Miller, H enry, 48, 112Millett, Kateon cichlid effect, 134-35on historical function of women,20^-8on women as cunt, 199Minorsand sex offenders, 190-93See also ChildrenM iranda, Carmen, 155M odesty, 148
Molestation, 56-58and homosexuals, 60See also ChildrenMom (“Big Bellied Mamas”; magazine),218Money, 20-22, 24, 59Montreuil, Anne-Prospfere de, 75,87, 87Montreuil, Madame de, 84Sade and, 74-77Sadean sycophants and, 86-87Sade’s view of, repeated, 90Montreuil, Ren6e-P£lagie deand biographers of Sade, 86-88biography of, 72-78, 82Sade to, in defense of himself,91Sade to, on himself, 90Moravia, Alberto, 206Morgan, Robertcrime of a woman comparedwith that of Sade, 90*on madness and women, 101on women put to death, 88Motherand boys escaping into manhood,49-51draining of, 14fetish as substitute for penis of,124losing incestuous desire for,204-5as object, 105-8Sadean view of, 97-98Mothers and daughtersmutilation and, 132photographic parody of, 129-31Mothers: The Matriarchal Theory ofSocial Origins, The (Briffault),133“M ust We Burn Sade? ” (de Beauvoir),81Namingin “Beaver H unters” photograph,27-28as male power, 17—18 (see alsoPower)and pornography, 166-67Nanon (procuress), 76-77, 91Napolean I, 79, 83Navy (U . S. ), 140, 142Nazis, 142-47Nehrich, Richard B., Jr., 140, 141New York Times, The, 139, 208Nicriven, 88Nietzsche, Friedrich, 71“Night Words” (Steiner), 145Nihilism, 67N in, Anais, 34Noonan, John T ., Jr., 96N orth, Maurice, 123Objectification, 113-23, 127Objects, 101-28alienation and person as,120-121beauty and, 115-18fetish, see Fetishas living dummies, 108-9mother as, 105-8normal and natural cruelty impliedin using women as,109-10and objectification, 113-23, 127obsession with, as response toquality of, 113as passive, 107-8prostitutes as, 119-20 (see alsowhores)psychology and, 103-5sensate beings as, 103-4value of, 118-19women as, 49
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P L U M EP u b l i s h e d b y t h
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F or Jo h n S toltenbergIn M em ory
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C o n t e n t sIntroductionxiiiPref
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sires; and I appealed to them, whet
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who has been bought and sold. She m
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esist; they disappear when the dang
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When he arrived, he informed me tha
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mom’s. [He came after her with a
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word to make it denote a story, pro
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T he burden of proof will be on tho
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new social truth emerged, one that
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“we”? What is the “freedom
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is mine, ” Therese Stanton wrote
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who were the same, never of those w
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the pictures. Instead, some of us u
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us—let us be dumb and die. ”181
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eciprocity, whereas pornography inv
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or scrutiny, that there is an equat
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culture, though it is smothered in
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women evil; he exterminates nine mi
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was to extend in time, to be not on
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adult, impervious to the ambivalenc
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culture, he is a giant, enlarged by
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the dead center of the car hood and
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hunter, think of seals clubbed to d
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in the larger culture, also indicat
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eventually come from the shower. Th
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limited framework of male sexual va
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the greatest and best test of mascu
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another female’s cunt. ” The hu
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studio. Narrator wonders whether he
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sleep. Rod wakes to find Larry assf
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Lesbians are in each vignette. In t
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distinctly pinkish. One of her hand
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Men and BoysJust so docs Miller ret
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The boy will be a witness as the fa
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Body, philosopher Norman O. Brown,
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penis signifies humanity. Though th
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Throughout male culture, the penis
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aggression of the aggressor and use
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does not exist; rape of the sacred
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male who cannot change his devalued
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Male perceptions of women are askew
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The solution, as Dinnerstein sees i
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other century. There are only the o
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3The Marquis de Sade ( 1 7 4 0 —1
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most of the women and girls he abus
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Sade took Keller to his private hou
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another order was issued for his ar
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sporadically). O n Sade’s release
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perhaps fourteen years old, essenti
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With his usual perception about him
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power of the biographers to define
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esistance from “puritanical” or
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had the authority to spend her mone
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degree, is authentic because a man
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collection of Sade’s work, point
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sexuality. The shared victim result
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Sade himself, in a footnote to Juli
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A daughter’s turning on her mothe
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Sade’s work in exciting the imagi
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is movable property— cattle, wive
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The whole world outside man himself
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image of her while being an externa
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falling off a log for her. It is ea
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leave her alone. The moment we leav
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Brain is absolutely clear that “[
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sterile word for the phenomenon tha
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significantly determine the quality
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in the realm of female beauty, the
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The prostitute is seen as the antit
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ment. It can also be seen as the cu
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in other words, ” writes Becker,
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Ullerstam, in The Erotic Minorities
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Mother, whore, beauty, abomination,
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own. H er race is ambiguous. From h
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weapon in her hand. Still, the olde
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W ith both the male and the female,
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is propaganda, whether used for soc
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it that way. ” ’7 The weak are
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means that it also generates incred
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the poisonous materials which are u
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Willy linked the experience of blac
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This cautious statement avoids the
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are not really distinct because the
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maintained; otherwise— especially
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variable. It is determined more by
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aised slightly off the floor. The p
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ut she belongs to the Anglo boyfrie
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something important for his complic
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value to possession of the woman. T
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confusing. She is without purpose.
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sex. Force is sex. The woman who wa
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United States, expressed the weary
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head. They parked near the corpse a
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made her lock herself in the wardro
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her robe or back or head while he w
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sat him in a wooden armchair. Simon
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among intellectuals: he writes of h
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ing, or even alerting, conscience.
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followers conclude that women have
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y the human female never matched hi
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programs for combating what is call
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obvious sort of commercialized pros
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When the mates discover them in coi
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scientists, that lip was just looki
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means that force was not used in co
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encouragement was nothing of the so
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vs. adults, ” the sexual act was
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In a study specifically of force us
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T he porne was the cheapest (in the
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the porneia as the technology widen
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why rape is absurd and incomprehens
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ecommendation that legal persecutio
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confined to the cultural level of a
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In the introduction to Black Fashio
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her between her black loins. She sc
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Robert Grey does not want to hurt h
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use of her sex is the use of her sk
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hymen [laughs] so he can’t take i
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enlarged uterus displaces the rest
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ers as whores— completes the pict
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And inside this system, women are p
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Women Against Sexist Violence in Po
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3. John Stoltenberg, “Eroticism a
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26. Gorer, Life and Ideas, p. 37.27
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18. Otto Weininger, Sex and Charact
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58. Ibid., p. 14.59. Herbert Marcus
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43. Ibid., p. 120.44. Ibid., p. 63.
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9. John Wolfenden, Report of the Co
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Addams, Jane. A New Conscience and
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- Page 272 and 273: York: W. VV. Norton & Co., 1978.Bur
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- Page 276 and 277: Didion, Joan. The White Album. New
- Page 278 and 279: Fedder, Ruth. A Girl Grows Up. New
- Page 280 and 281: Fuchs, Estelle. The Second Season:
- Page 282 and 283: Goffman, Erving. Relations in Publi
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- Page 286 and 287: Ivinskaya, Olga. A Captive of Time.
- Page 288 and 289: Youth. New York: W. W. Norton & Co.
- Page 290 and 291: Lewis, Oscar. Tbe Children of Sanch
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- Page 298 and 299: New York: New York University Press
- Page 300 and 301: Shiloh, Ailon, ed. Studies in Human
- Page 302 and 303: Strindberg, August. Inferno and Fro
- Page 304 and 305: Wald, Karen. Children of Che. Palo
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