Issue Details: First known date: 2019... 2019 Germaine Greer's On Rape Revisited: Clarifying the Long-standing Relationship Between Rape and Heterosexual Pleasure in Greer's Work
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'Germaine Greer is a feminist iconoclast frequently misread, misunderstood and maligned. Her most recent book On Rape was unanimously panned in media reviews by feminists. This article argues that third and fourth wave feminist readings of On Rape-and of Greer more broadly-fail to grasp the book as part of her oeuvre. I note that Greer is making two related arguments in On Rape, both of which have been overlooked or underplayed in media reviews. The first concerns what she calls "everyday rape" or the unwanted, sometimes forced, sex that women routinely experience, and occasionally consent to, in long-term heterosexual relationships; the second concerns women's loss of sexual pleasure associated with this. Against the prevailing view that Greer has transmogrified into a "rape apologist," I read the book as part of an ongoing conversation that Greer has been having with the culture, with herself and with women for fifty years. Greer has not changed her position, rather she is looking at another angle of her long-standing argument that the sexually autonomous woman has the right to determine her own boundaries and experience and, moreover, that "bad sex" is emotionally and spiritually destructive. Greer hasn't changed, feminism has. I then return to the reception of the book and consider what distinguishes Greer's style and politics identifying her left libertarian radicalism as anathema to contemporary progressive politics.' (Publication abstract)

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    y separately published work icon Hecate vol. 45 no. 1/2 Carole Ferrier (editor), Jena Woodhouse (editor), 2019 21220789 2019 periodical issue

    'The house husbands or SNAGS, a new phenomenon, did not see this as a permanent role and most, sooner or later, tired of a lack of life in the public sphere; despite a brief fashion for the male population's public job being private Home Duties, many men longed to re-enter the usual world; one in which important or sometimes stimulating things went on. The Australian Institute of Family Studies (in the government Department of Social Services) has regularly researched attitudes to gender roles within households in relation to things such as divided domestic work and has found, in its surveys, considerable support for shared housework. Other factors are in play in many countries, especially the incidence of child marriage (650 million girls) and of Female Genital Mutilation (imposed upon 200 million girls), the latter increasingly administered by actual health services rather than the stereotypical old, female relative with a razor blade and a sewing basket. The witches and midwives of centuries ago were one thing (documented, for example, in Barbara Ehrenreich's 1973 Witches, Midwives and Nurses) but more recently, in COVID-19 times, women are much in demand in their jobs/professions as health workers, and have been given enthusiastic encouragement to lead their working life in close contact with often viralent infections, as "essential workers"-a category that seems to have benefits for the bourgeoisie who belong to it, but not many for nurses working long and demanding shifts, wearing often-uncomfortable Personal Protective Equipment, in hospitals and infection-testing clinics.' (Carole Ferrier, Editorial introduction) 

    2019
    pg. 267-288, 308
Last amended 5 Mar 2021 08:39:43
267-288, 308 Germaine Greer's On Rape Revisited: Clarifying the Long-standing Relationship Between Rape and Heterosexual Pleasure in Greer's Worksmall AustLit logo Hecate
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