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Satanic Feminism Lucifer As The Liberator Of Woman In Nineteenthcentury Culture Per Faxneld

  • SKU: BELL-48384610
Satanic Feminism Lucifer As The Liberator Of Woman In Nineteenthcentury Culture Per Faxneld
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Satanic Feminism Lucifer As The Liberator Of Woman In Nineteenthcentury Culture Per Faxneld instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 62.09 MB
Pages: 577
Author: Per Faxneld
ISBN: 9780190664473, 0190664479
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

Satanic Feminism Lucifer As The Liberator Of Woman In Nineteenthcentury Culture Per Faxneld by Per Faxneld 9780190664473, 0190664479 instant download after payment.

According to the Bible, Eve was the first to heed Satan's advice to eat the forbidden fruit and thus responsible for all of humanity's subsequent miseries. The notion of woman as the Devil's accomplice is prominent throughout Christian history and has been used to legitimize the subordination of wives and daughters. In the nineteenth century, rebellious females performed counter-readings of this misogynist tradition. Lucifer was reconceptualized as a feminist liberator of womankind, and Eve became a heroine. In these reimaginings, Satan is an ally in the struggle against a tyrannical patriarchy supported by God the Father and his male priests. Per Faxneld shows how this Satanic feminism was expressed in a wide variety of nineteenth-century literary texts, autobiographies, pamphlets, newspaper articles, paintings, sculptures, and even artifacts of consumer culture like jewelry. He details how colorful figures like the suffragette Elizabeth Cady Stanton, gender-bending Theosophist H. P. Blavatsky, author Aino Kallas, actress Sarah Bernhardt, anti-clerical witch enthusiast Matilda Joslyn Gage, decadent marchioness Luisa Casati, and the Luciferian lesbian poetess Ren e Vivien embraced these reimaginings. By exploring the connections between esotericism, literature, art and the political realm, Satanic Feminism sheds new light on neglected aspects of the intellectual history of feminism, Satanism, and revisionary mythmaking.

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