Proud Man - Katharine Burdekin - Books - Feminist Press at The City University of - 9781558610675 - October 14, 1993
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Proud Man


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   Originally published in England in 1934, this searing, timely novel offers and incisive critique of the sexual politics and militarism of England, and the West as a whole, in the post-World War I years. The novel is told from the perspective of a "Genuine Person" who has been hurtled thousands of years back in time from a future society whose citizens are peaceful, androgynous, self-fertilizing, vegetarian, and without national government and artificial social divisions of gender and class. Taking on first female, then male form, the Genuine Person confronts the reality of England in the 1930s: a society deeply troubled by fascism, the aftermath of war, gender and class divisions, religious hypocrisy, national chauvinism, and the breakdown of families and other social institutions. The protagonist is drawn into relationships with a priest who teachers her/him the English language, a woman struggling with sexual politics and sexual identity, and a man haunted by a murder he committed, driven by his deeply ingrained hatred and fear of women. This powerful novel by a master of dystopian fiction raises disturbing questions about war and peace and the nature of human relationships in an oppressive culture.


350 pages

Media Books     Paperback Book   (Book with soft cover and glued back)
Released October 14, 1993
ISBN13 9781558610675
Publishers Feminist Press at The City University of
Pages 350
Dimensions 139 × 215 × 27 mm   ·   499 g
Language English  
Contributor Daphne Patai

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