The Female Malady: Women, Madness, and English Culture by Elaine Showalter
Tag: gender
bell hooks from All About Love
Andrea Dworkin | Our Blood
Clarice Lispector | The Passion According to G.H.
Anne Carson | Economy of the Unlost
From “Historical and developmental roots of female dependency” by Marcia Westkott

Alexis Hunter, Approach to Fear: XVII: Masculinisation of Society – exorcise, 1977, 10 vintage colour photographs, mounted on 2 panels, Each: 25 x 101 cm
Jana Sterbak
Lidia Yuknavitch & Sarah Gerard – How to Harness the Energy of Female Rage, Creative Destruction & the Cosmos

Andy Warhol, Where Is Your Rupture?, 1961, oil on canvas
Keeping males and females from telling the truth about what happens to them in families is one way patriarchal culture is maintained. A great majority of individuals enforce an unspoken rule in the culture as a whole that demands we keep the secrets of patriarchy, thereby protecting the rule of the father. This rule of silence is upheld when the culture refuses everyone easy access even to the word “patriarchy.” Most children do not learn what to call this system of institutionalized gender roles, so rarely do we name it in everyday speech. This silence promotes denial. And how can we organize to challenge and change a system that cannot be named?
love men not maleness
bell hooks, The Will to Change: Men, Masculinity, and Love

Mary Kelly, Gloria Patri, 12 disks, 6 trophies, and 5 shields, the Masculine Masquerade exhibition, MIT List visual Arts Centre, Cambridge, MA

Michel Journiac, The Virgin Mother, 1982
