Right-wing politics
fromwww.nytimes.com
4 months agoBook Review: Right-Wing Women,' by Andrea Dworkin
Dworkin presents right-wing women as realists who recognize male dominance but acquiesce for survival instead of believing in reform.
In her conversations with scientists who are studying endurance, longevity, and autoimmunity—all areas where the female body excels—Vartan paints a picture of the female body as strong, capable, and gifted in ways that have not often been celebrated.
Scholars and victims, important as both are, risk viewing medieval Jews as a subordinate segment of Christian societyânot a thriving community that comprised part of a larger medieval world.
The cancellation of the Berkshire Conference underscores the profound impact of political pressure on academic institutions, illustrating the current environment's threat to gender and sexuality studies.
Mineke Schipper argues that the perceptions of female creators in mythology have dramatically shifted from independent beings to subservient roles, emphasizing a historical minimization and fear of women's bodies.