Find:    

Idols of Perversity Fantasies of Feminine Evil in Fin-de-Siecle Culture

Idols of Perversity Fantasies of Feminine Evil in Fin-de-Siecle Culture reviews Subtitle: Fantasies of Feminine Evil in Fin-de-Siecle Culture
Author(s): Dijkstra, Bram
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
Format: Paperback
List Price:  Rs. 2,442

Category: Criticism

ISBN-13: 9780195056525
ISBN-10: 0195056523
Language: English
Pages: 480
Dimensions: 10.01x7.04x1.00 in.
Age Range: All Ages

Overview:

At the turn of the century, an unprecedented attack on women erupted in virtually every aspect of culture: literary, artistic, scientific, and philosophic. Throughout Europe and America, artists and intellectuals banded together to portray women as static and unindividuated beings who functioned solely in a sexual and reproductive capacity, thus formulating many of the anti-feminine platitudes that today still constrain women's potential.

Bram Dijkstra's Idols of Perversity explores the nature and development of turn-of-the-century misogyny in the works of hundreds of writers, artists, and scientists, including Zola, Strindberg, Wedekind, Henry James, Rossetti, Renoir, Moreau, Klimt, Darwin, and Spencer. Dijkstra demonstrates that the most prejudicial aspects of Evolutionary Theory helped to justify this wave of anti-feminine sentiment. The theory claimed that the female of the species could not participate in the great evolutionary process that would guide the intellectual male to his ultimate, predestined role as a disembodied spiritual essence. Darwinists argued that women hindered this process by their willingness to lure men back to a sham paradise of erotic materialism. To protect the male's continued evolution, artists and intellectuals produced a flood of pseudo-scientific tracts, novels, and paintings which warned the world's males of the evils lying beneath the surface elegance of woman's tempting skin.