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Sexual Correctness: The Gender-Feminist Attack on Women
 
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Sexual Correctness: The Gender-Feminist Attack on Women [Library Binding]

Wendy McElroy (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

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Book Description

August 1996 0786402261 978-0786402267
This work gives a critical overview of the ideological shift among many feminists. The issues of sexual correctness are examined in detail, showing how the changing ideology is destroying the principle of "a woman's body, a woman's right" and endangering women's right to choose. On each issue, this work presents alternatives in the individualist traditions that defined the feminism movement for many years.

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Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Sexual correctness, in McElroy's (A Woman's Right to Pornography, LJ 8/95) view, is "an all-embracing theory dictating how husbands should treat wives, what comments strangers on the street may make to women passing by, how much employers should pay female workers, what subjects co-workers may discuss, and how women may use their own bodies (e.g., not posing for pornographic pictures)." She identifies gender, liberal, and individualist "ideologies of feminism" and then attempts to repudiate gender feminism (a la Andrea Dworkin, Susan Griffin, and Catharine MacKinnon) while affirming individualist feminism (a la Voltairine de Cleyre) as "a new ideological pradigm for feminism." Footnoted chapters with conclusions on rape, pornography, sexual harassment, affirmative action, comparable worth, marriage and the family, prostitution, and abortion convey her contention that "feminism may be on the verge of harming women." Despite obfuscation?especially regarding the sex/gender distinction and nondiscriminatory affirmative action?her work is useful in providing access to aspects of feminist theory in the United States and Canada.?Helen Rippier Wheeler, formerly with SLIS, Univ. of Califnia-Berkeley
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Review

"useful in providing access to aspects of feminist theory" -- Library Journal

Product Details

  • Library Binding: 200 pages
  • Publisher: McFarland & Company (August 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0786402261
  • ISBN-13: 978-0786402267
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #4,031,643 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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47 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Classic McElroy: precise, logical, spirited... not boring!, May 1, 1997
By A Customer
This review is from: Sexual Correctness: The Gender-Feminist Attack on Women (Library Binding)

Several years ago, when I was finding myself generally annoyed with what I saw as a negative editorial attitude in Liberty magazine, I came upon an article that electrified me. This article was clear, concise, logical and utterly devastating of some alarming idiocies I perceived as having taken over the feminist movement. The article was written by someone I'd never heard of, but someone for whom I instantly felt a flood of love and kindred feelings: Wendy McElroy. This was important to me because, even though I am male, I had considered myself a feminist when I was a teenager. By this I mean that I considered the historical and contemporary treatment of women to be unethical, undignified, and unbearable with disheartening frequency, and I thought the situation should be rectified. I used the word "feminist" on myself.

A movement which started out saying "I am a Woman and I don't need a Man to make my life a great thing" seemed to be saying something new: "We Women have a new boyfriend and you'd better watch out Man, because his name is Uncle Sam and he's bigger than you are!" This new position seemed to prefer any submission to the state -- no matter how vile -- to submission to individual men or to freedom, which was what I had always thought women's liberation was about.

After years of vain searching for anyone who could understand the threat to women posed by this new feminism, Wendy McElroy's Liberty article was more than a breath of fresh air; it was a strong jolt of invigorating tonic. Finally! Someone who understands! Not only that, but someone who understands better than I do and has read the works of these destroyers of women's rights. Someone who has documented the ways in which the very laws drafted by these elitist "helpers of misguided women" have hurt women.

I tell you, this got me on my feet!

I went out and found some feminists at the local college and showed them McElroy's article. I asked them what they thought. I asked them to show me where and how McElroy might be wrong. I asked them why submission to the state was better than submission to individual men. I asked them why women should not be free individuals. I pleaded with them to just talk to me about these issues.

The only answer was a deafening silence. So I stopped paying attention to feminists. They weren't going to listen to me -- a man -- anyway...

And then Wendy McElroy burst back onto my intellectual scene with the publication of XXX: A Woman's Right to Pornography. Perhaps because I'd tuned feminism out, I missed the publication of Freedom, Feminism, and The State and it was XXX that made me aware that there may be hope for feminism after all.

If XXX gave me a reason to hope that feminism might once again become a force for good, Sexual Correctness has given me ten reasons, maybe a hundred. XXX was like a hairline crack in a dark prison cell; now the light comes pouring in all around as the walls come tumbling down.

Do I wax hyperbolic? Read Sexual Correctness yourself and tell me if I'm not right. Sexual Correctness is classic McElroy: clear, concise, and devastatingly logical. It is detailed and precise without being lengthy or boring. It is spirited and quite pointed without ever descending into ad-homenim attacks (or would that be ad-feminim?). It is painstakingly researched without becoming pedantic and without losing its focus. All of this makes Sexual Correctness a pleasure to read, but its greatest value is a thorough and merciless exposition of the black cancer that has been seeking power over all people through the vehicle of feminism.

Sexual Correctness describes three kinds of feminism: Liberal, Gender, and Individualist. Individualist feminism has a long history replete with clearly individualist writings that go back as far as the 1830's. Liberal feminism characterized the movement in the sixties and the struggle to secure legal and safe reproductive choice. Gender feminism began to take over the modern feminist movement in the 70's, though it also harkens back to older writings: those of Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels.

This last kind of feminism, now aggressively dominant among the leadership of the movement, has established an almost religious dogmatism that brooks no criticism and refuses to even hear alternative viewpoints. This ideological calcification of thought is what McElroy calls "Sexual Correctness." Like the broader "Political Correctness" it is an intolerant hostility that not only runs rampant over individual rights in general, but hurts the very people it is alleged to be in benefit of: women.

McElroy takes the "Sexual Correctness" paradigm of gender feminists and shows how it is applied to various feminist issues, including rape, pornography, sexual harassment, preferential treatment, affirmative action, comparable worth, marriage and the family, prostitution, abortion and reproductive technology. The liberal feminist perspective is contrasted with that of the gender feminists and questions are asked as to how either of these can be believed to actually liberate and benefit women more than individualist feminism.

Sexual Correctness is a small book, only 190 pages long, including numerous end-notes, a bibliographical essay, and a bibliography. And yet the work is exhaustive. McElroy's observations and questions are kept to a bare minimum while the gender feminists are given miles of word-ropes with which they deftly hang themselves. This is an important point because if a conscientious reader draws a conclusion, such as that gender feminists are more interested in fomenting class warfare to vent their hatred of the free market system (and men, incidentally), then the reader wants to know that the views of gender feminists have not been misrepresented. Rather than quoting a few words out of context, McElroy quotes entire paragraphs of gender feminist rhetoric and then draws attention to some of their implications.

Something I learned from Sexual Correctness is how closely tied to Marxism the ideology of gender feminists is. Not only do some quote Marxist doctrine directly and predicate all of their analysis on a class struggle model, but many use the same tactics in dismissing the arguments of their opponents without answering them. Marxists dismissed the statistics and evidence of market economists by asserting that they were based on "bourgeois logic," which was flawed by definition. Gender feminists seem to think that they need not hear conflicting views or examine disproving evidence because it is based on "patriarchal-capitalist science" which does not apply to feminist analysis, by definition.

There are many more ideas of value in SC, but I think McElroy expresses them better than I can.

I wholeheartedly encourage all to read Sexual Correctness. Individualist feminists will be able to make great use of its arguments, evidence, and questions. Liberal feminists are going to need to read the book if they are to have a hope of understanding why they are losing their grip on feminism. Even gender feminists will need to read it if they hope to stand understand the backlash from women who want nothing to do with the gender feminist headlong rush toward a new dependency upon the state.

I especially think men need to read this book; it will help them to escape the bewilderment so many of them feel when they try to respect women and receive only scorn in return. This will tell you why, guys!

Wendy McElroy has exposed for all to view the dark sickness that has seeped into the heart of feminism.

For those who want to see the movement restored to health, for it to become a force for the liberation of women and the furtherance of human dignity, Sexual Correctness may well turn out to be a pivotal work. The advocates of freedom owe it to themselves and to their posterity to do everything they can to see to it that McElroy is heard.

Exposure is not enough. Action must follow. McElroy's questions demand answers.

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