ABSTRACT

This a collection of essays about women, by women, which examine the production of femininity within a patriarchal society. The essays show that characteristics generally considered to be ‘feminine’ are in fact cultural constructions within a patriarchal order. The patriarchal culture is taken by us to be a system of meanings, as well as power relations, which pervades our view of women at both a conscious and an unconscious level.

The symbolism of the rituals, myths, art works and polemics examined in the essays is related to the ways women are psychically constructed and constrained by the dominant heterosexual order. The Mother, the Witch, the Whore, the Pure Woman, the Amazon and the Free Woman are considered and the contributors make extensive use of original source material to give force to the argument that the stereotypic view of a feminine woman as naturally and inevitably weak, passive and powerless is one that can be seriously challenged.

chapter |11 pages

Introduction

part one|60 pages

Sexuality and the Body

chapter |1 pages

The Mother

chapter Chapter 1|19 pages

The Mother and the Hospital

An unfortunate fit between the woman's internal world and some hospital practices

chapter |1 pages

The Witch

chapter Chapter 2|15 pages

The Witch and her Devils

An exploration of the relationship between femininity and illness

chapter |1 pages

The Whore

chapter Chapter 3|16 pages

The Whore in Peru

part Two|72 pages

Representations of Women

chapter Chapter 4|16 pages

Tess: The Making of a Pure Woman

chapter |1 pages

The Amazon

chapter Chapter 5|21 pages

The City's Achievements

The patriotic Amazonamachy and ancient Athens

chapter |1 pages

The Woman-Power

chapter Chapter 6|26 pages

The Woman-Power

Religious heresy and feminism in early English socialism