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Enemy Feminisms

TERFs, Policewomen, and Girlbosses Against Liberation

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

From the author of Abolish the Family, an unflinching tour of two hundred years of enemy feminisms, making the case instead for the bold, liberatory feminist politics we need.

In recent years, "white feminism" and girlboss feminism have taken a justified beating. We know that leaning in won't make our jobs any more tolerable and that white women have proven to be, at best, unreliable allies. But in a time of rising fascism, ceaseless attacks on reproductive justice, and violent transphobia, we need to reckon with what Western feminism has wrought if we have any hope of building the feminist world we need.

Sophie Lewis offers an unflinching tour of enemy feminisms, from 19th century imperial feminists and police officers to 20th century KKK feminists and pornophobes to today's anti-abortion and TERF feminists. Enemy feminisms exist. Feminism is not an inherent political good. Only when we acknowledge that can we finally reckon with the ways these feminisms have pushed us toward counterproductive and even violent ends. And only then can we finally engage in feminist strategizing that is truly antifascist.

At once a left transfeminist battlecry against cisness, a decolonial takedown of nationalist womanhoods, and a sex-radical retort to femmephobia in all its guises, Enemy Feminisms is above all a fierce, brilliant love letter to feminism.

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    • Booklist

      January 1, 2025
      Feminism has always included thinkers more invested in aligning themselves with power than in pursuing universal liberation. Enemy Feminisms argues that we cannot create a truly liberatory feminism without first understanding the long history of feminist activists who found homes within feminist movements despite--and often because of--their regressive and bigoted ideologies. The book is set up as a kind of field guide, with each chapter dedicated to a particular species of enemy feminist. Perhaps inadvertently, this framing disconcertingly implies an equivalence between, for instance, the girlboss and the lady fascist. The "enemy" framing does not allow for particularly nuanced reads of historical feminist work (from Mary Wollstonecraft to bell hooks) that does not wholly line up with the author's modern ideals. Nor does the author seem interested in exploring the broader societal impacts of these figures; her arguments prioritize ideology above material consequence. While the book is a fascinating catalog of the dark side of feminist history, it's hard to know what lesson--beyond "feminists can be terrible too!"--readers are meant to learn.

      COPYRIGHT(2025) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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  • English

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