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53 pages 1 hour read

Germaine Greer

The Female Eunuch

Nonfiction | Book | Adult | Published in 1970

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Key Figures

Germaine Greer

Germaine Greer is a retired writer, academic, and broadcaster with a long history of social and political activism. Her work has largely centered around the pursuit of radical feminist liberation. Born in 1939 in Melbourne, Australia, Greer has spent much of her adult life between Australia and the United Kingdom, with part of her career taking her to the United States. She has held positions at the University of Warwick, Cambridge University, and the University of Tulsa.

As a feminist, Greer stands out because the topics she speaks about and the manner in which she discusses them are bold and radical. Her writing style illustrates this brazen approach to discussing women’s issues and rights and serves to command the attention of the women about whom she is writing. Her overt rejection of qualities traditionally associated with women is at the heart of her writing about radical feminism with conviction.

Proposed originally as a reflection on the 50th anniversary of (some) women’s gaining the right to vote in the United Kingdom, Greer ultimately wrote The Female Eunuch to express her own sense of need to advance women’s rights. Upon its publication, scholars did not receive it particularly well, though it was quite popular with average female readers, who were the intended blurred text
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