Welcome to the weekly Fairer Disputations round-up: your one-stop shop for the best in sex-realist feminism. This week: Carl R. Trueman on Shulamith Firestone’s prophetic voice, Laila Mickelwait on Pornhub’s crimes, Leonard Sax on a new brain study showing differences between the sexes, violence against women, feminism and fat, a brothel owner’s memoir, FD recommends a book—and more!
First, Carl R. Trueman on feminist Shulamith Firestone’s triumphant vision of liberation, and why her desire for disembodied will above all is ultimately dehumanizing.
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Next, Laila Mickelwait, author of the newly released Takedown: Inside the Fight to Shut Down Pornhub for Child Abuse, Rape, and Sex Trafficking, argues that Pornhub’s rebrand isn’t a clean slate for its many victims.
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Finally, Leonard Sax on a recent brain study showing hard wired differences between the sexes—and how we can use this newfound knowledge to help both girls and boys attain equal rights and opportunities.
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More Great Reads:
- Violence Against Women a ‘National Emergency’ in England and Wales, Police Say, Vikram Dodd, The Guardian (Pair with: Is Andrew Tate to Blame for Violence Against Women — or a Distraction?, Joan Smith, UnHerd)
- How Was it For You? by Eve Smith Review – My Life as a Sex Worker, Sarah Ditum, The Times (Content warning – quite graphic)
- The Original Bluestockings Were Fiercer Than You Imagined, Margaret Talbot, The New Yorker
- Is Fat a Feminist Issue?, Victoria Smith, The Critic
- Where I’ve Been and Where I’m Going, Helen Roy, Roy House in Budapest
Fairer Disputations Recommends:
Much of philosophy has been concerned with death, while birth—the other major life event—has been largely unremarked-on. Yet birth is an experience each of us has undergone. In Jennifer Banks’ insightful Natality: Toward a Philosophy of Birth, she looks to the thought and art of seven Western thinkers to explore more fully what Hannah Arendt called the “miracle that saves the world”: natality.
Also read: Toward a Theology of Birth: Jennifer Banks, Julian of Norwich, and the Acceptance of Suffering, Beatrice Scudeler, Fairer Disputations
Need more book recommendations?