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Women of Ideas: And What Men Have Done to Them: From Aphra Behn Adrienne Rich
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Women of Ideas: And What Men Have Done to Them: From Aphra Behn Adrienne Rich
Current price: $200.00
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Barnes and Noble
Women of Ideas: And What Men Have Done to Them: From Aphra Behn Adrienne Rich
Current price: $200.00
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Size: Hardcover
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Originally published in 1982, with characteristic energy, humour and learning Dale Spender traces three hundred years of women’s ideas. She uncovers not only the ways and words of women, but the methods of men. While men control knowledge, she argues, they are in a position to
take
women’s ideas. If they like them, they
use
them; if they don’t, they
lose
them.
Every fifty years women are required to reinvent the wheel, for every generation of women is initiated into a world in which women’s traditions have been denied and buried.
Providing convincing evidence that women’s absence from the record as creative intellectual beings is not women’s fault, but men’s, Dale Spender claims at least 150 women from the past and suggests how such erasure can be avoided in the future. Given that men take what they want from women’s ideas, Dale Spender advocates that women withdraw their labour, that they go on a knowledge strike, for if women cannot control the knowledge they produce, at least they can ensure that it cannot be used as evidence against them.
Exposing the inadequacies of much modern (male) scholarship, the author provides the readers with the opportunity to share in her own discoveries, excitement, and ‘mistakes’ in the process of researching and writing this book. The result is that
Women of Ideas: And What Men Have Done to Them
is an ambitious and provocative book which will be used as a reference for many years to come, and which is also, from beginning to end, a stimulating read.
take
women’s ideas. If they like them, they
use
them; if they don’t, they
lose
them.
Every fifty years women are required to reinvent the wheel, for every generation of women is initiated into a world in which women’s traditions have been denied and buried.
Providing convincing evidence that women’s absence from the record as creative intellectual beings is not women’s fault, but men’s, Dale Spender claims at least 150 women from the past and suggests how such erasure can be avoided in the future. Given that men take what they want from women’s ideas, Dale Spender advocates that women withdraw their labour, that they go on a knowledge strike, for if women cannot control the knowledge they produce, at least they can ensure that it cannot be used as evidence against them.
Exposing the inadequacies of much modern (male) scholarship, the author provides the readers with the opportunity to share in her own discoveries, excitement, and ‘mistakes’ in the process of researching and writing this book. The result is that
Women of Ideas: And What Men Have Done to Them
is an ambitious and provocative book which will be used as a reference for many years to come, and which is also, from beginning to end, a stimulating read.