this post was submitted on 04 Sep 2025
27 points (100.0% liked)
WomensStuff
649 readers
157 users here now
Women only trans inclusive This is an inclusive community for all things women. Whether you're here for make up tips, feminism or just friendly chit chat, we've got you covered.
Rules…
- Women only… trans women are women, and transphobic or gender critical talk isn’t allowed. Anyone under the trans umbrella (e.g. non-binary, bigender, agender) is free to decide whether a women's community is a good fit for them.
- Don’t be a dick. No personal attacks, no aggression, play nice.
- Don’t hate on groups, hatefilled talk about groups is not allowed. Ever.
- No governmental politics, so no talk of Trump actions etc. We recommend Feminism@beehaw.org for that, but here is an escape from it.
- New accounts or users with few comments may have their posts removed to prevent spam and bad-faith participation.
founded 6 months ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Thank you for sharing! Back in my less radical but more rebellious days I really enjoyed reading radical feminist works. I didn't agree with most of their takes, but it was exciting to see the way they viewed the world. Now I'm less able to stomach revolutionary texts that aren't firmly rooted in better politics, even as just fun thought exercises. I still think they were important to me while forming my own beliefs, but I doubt revisiting them would serve much purpose. Nice to see that's not a wholly unique experience.
2nd Wave White Middle Class Feminism was an institution that needed being torn down. Paglia attacked that edifice from one side, but that's because intersectionality and 3rd Wave Feminism hadn't caught on yet. I loved that Paglia was doing this, even though I disagreed with a lot of her specifics.
I think there's some value even today in reading her attacks and reasoning. On the one side a lot of her savage critiques of feminism still ring true. On the other side, it's good to have a smart and capable deliverer of bad ideas for countering practice. (It's why Sexual Personae is still on my shelf.)
And hey, at least she's not Naomi Wolfe.