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Camille Paglia (1947 - )
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Vamps
and Tramps : New Essays by
Camille Paglia
The bestselling
author of Sexual Personae and Sex, Art, and American Culture is
back with a fiery new collection of essays on everything from art
and celebrity to gay activism, Lorena Bobbitt to Bill and Hillary.
These essays have never appeared in book form, and many will be
appearing in print for the first time.
Susie
Bright's Sexwise : America's Favorite X-Rated Intellectual Does
Dan Quayle, Catharine MacKinnon, Stephen King, Camille Paglia,
Nicholson Baker, by Susie Bright
Susie
Bright celebrates the first amendment, lesbianism, single
motherhood and fantasizes an eventful night with Dan Quayle in
this uninhibited and quirky collection of essays, articles and
book reviews written over the past few years. Offbeat and sexy,
Bright defends Madonna, attacks Dr. Ruth and is snubbed by Camille
Paglia herself in this rather amazing and outspoken collection.
Bright is gay and proud of it and considers herself a serious and
first-rate pornographer. She gets into endless trouble with
right-wingers and kicks and screams her way out of it throughout
these pages. Witty, fearless and thought-provoking. (Amazon.com)
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by Marit Synnevåg
Site contains articles by and on Camille Paglia
as well as interviews, reviews of her work, additional links and an archive of her
speeches, letters and reviews.
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by Andreas Ehrencrona
Camille Paglia is probably the most
controversial feminist ever and she has become it through her
criticism of conventional feminism. Her statements that it is up
to women to defend themselves against rape and her dismissal of
sexual harassments as exaggerated together with violent attacks on
political correctness and American academia have given her many
enemies...
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by Tracy Quan
In 1990, when I began
reading Camille Paglia's Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence
from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson, I was so excited that I
would only put her book down to sleep, eat or turn a trick. It lay
on my bedside table next to the phone, a small supply of condoms
tucked inside the front cover. Whenever I slipped into Sexual
Personae to unwrap one, I felt vindicated. What better way to
pay tribute to Paglia's ideas? One evening, after attending a PONY
(Prostitutes of New York) planning session, I found myself at
Performance Space 122 in Manhattan's East Village. I was nearly
thrown down the stairs, in my high heels, by a (female)
performance artist who accused me of "reading Camille
Paglia"...
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Names Index:
A B
C D
E F
G H
I J
K L
M N
O P
Q R
S T
U V
W X
Y Z
| Authors
Index | Scholars
Index |
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