Andrea Dworkin (1946–2005)
Author of Intercourse
About the Author
Andrea Dworkin is one of the most controversial and influential feminist thinkers of our day. She has spoken at colleges, universities, and rallies all over the world and is the co-author (with Catharine A. MacKinnon) of civil rights legislation recognizing pornography as legally actionable sex show more discrimination. She is the author of thirteen books, including Pornography, Intercourse, and, most recently, Scapegoat show less
Works by Andrea Dworkin
SOUVENEZ-VOUS, RÉSISTEZ, NE CÉDEZ PAS: anthologie (Nouvelles questions féministes) (French and English Edition) (2017) 6 copies
Intercourse (Volume 1 of 2) (EasyRead Super Large 18pt Edition): The Twentieth Anniversary Edition (2009) 3 copies
Class Struggle 1 copy
The future of feminism 1 copy
The Wild Cherries of Lust 1 copy
Associated Works
Not for Sale: Feminists Resisting Prostitution and Pornography (2005) — Contributor, some editions — 70 copies, 1 review
The Woman Who Lost Her Names: Selected Writings of American Jewish Women (1980) — Contributor — 57 copies
Women in the Trees: U.S. Women's Short Stories About Battering and Resistance, 1839-1994 (1996) — Contributor — 45 copies
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 1946-09-26
- Date of death
- 2005-04-09
- Gender
- female
- Education
- Bennington College
- Relationships
- Stoltenberg, John (husband)
- Short biography
- American feminist and author, an outspoken critic of sexual politics, particularly of the victimizing effects of pornography on women.
Dworkin began writing at an early age. During her undergraduate years at Vermont's Bennington College (B.A., 1968), she became involved with the student demonstrations against the Vietnam War. Her experience in New York City's Women's House of Detention following an arrest during one such demonstration led her to analyze critically what she perceived as the male subjugation of women. A number of books, such as Woman Hating: A Radical Look at Sexuality (1974) and Our Blood: Prophecies and Discourses on Sexual Politics (1976), followed, along with studies of pornography, which, according to Dworkin, is one of the main weapons men deploy to control women. In collaboration with the feminist lawyer Catharine A. MacKinnon, Dworkin wrote Pornography and Civil Rights: A New Day for Women's Equality (1988). Together they also drafted a controversial ordinance that defined pornography as a form of sex discrimination and enabled victims of sexual assault to sue the makers and distributors of pornography in cases where a specific piece of pornography could be proved to be a direct cause of the assault. Several cities passed the ordinance in the 1980s, but it was later ruled unconstitutional by federal courts.
A lesbian, Dworkin also published in Gay Community News and other periodicals. Later books include Right-wing Women: The Politics of Domesticated Females (1983), Intercourse (1987), Letters from a War Zone (1989), and Scapegoat: The Jews, Israel, and Women's Liberation (2000). Dworkin also wrote a collection of short stories and the autobiographical novels Ice and Fire (1986) and Mercy (1991). Her autobiography, Heartbreak: The Political Memoir of a Feminist Militant, was published in 2002. - Nationality
- USA
- Associated Place (for map)
- USA
Members
Reviews
wow. published in the 80s and more relevant than ever reading it for the first time in 2025. andrea dworkin has this ability to write a sentence that hits you like a train and you just have to kind of sit back afterwards like Huh. and process for a bit. that's what was the most rewarding from this read—it didn't matter if i ultimately agreed with her analysis or theory in any given chapter bc at the end of the day she was presenting me with questions i hadn't been asking myself yet, new show more perspectives that i didn't consider before, and THAT is super fulfilling as a feminist text. i want to be challenged and see my own understanding of feminism evolve and this provided that. i wish i could thrust this into the hands of every young woman today as we watch conservatism rise, trending tradwives and the many pipelines into the ultra-right. i wanted to end with a quote but there were too many bangers to choose from show less
Hold Up!!! Did I put a Dworkin book on my list and give it 4 stars?!?!?!This book makes me seethe with rage, both in agreement at times and in overwhelmingly violent disagreement at others. The fact remains, this book is written so well that it deserves to be on every writer's list. Some day, I hope to pen a text with as much clarity and creativity as Intercourse.
Dworkin was a gift. Dedicated, full to the brim with compassion, intellectually brave, and in my mind a revolutionary. I loved the way this series of autobiographical essays gave glimpses into her life that really fleshed out who she was and how she got there.
It makes me wish I could have met her. A tantalising glimpse of an incredible woman.
I'd already read Intercourse and a few essays and interviews. I've got most of her books as pdfs but hadn't managed to get them onto my kindle until show more now. After this one I'm going to try reading the rest chronologically. I feel like this served as a good introduction, giving context to rest of her work. show less
It makes me wish I could have met her. A tantalising glimpse of an incredible woman.
I'd already read Intercourse and a few essays and interviews. I've got most of her books as pdfs but hadn't managed to get them onto my kindle until show more now. After this one I'm going to try reading the rest chronologically. I feel like this served as a good introduction, giving context to rest of her work. show less
This one's a real mixed bag, I thought. Her strengths definitely lie in literary analysis and interesting writing. She's spot on when she talks about witch hunts and foot-binding. What she often excels at is presenting horrific facts in quite a dispassionate fashion, which for me increases their impact.
The "facts" about fairies... well, I'll have to read up on what was accepted at the time, but right now I have no idea where she got that from. I found the second half of the book started to show more break down a bit with the sections on "androgyny". I'm not entirely sure why she decided to defend bestiality, but it's not a choice I would have made. I wasn't sure about the scientific material she used. I think Disorders of Sexual Development (DSDs) (intersex conditions) are becoming better understood now, and deserve a more rigorous approach and a whole book (to deal with scientific, ethical, social issues and present opposing theories).
This was her first book, so I'm not sure what I was expecting - obviously someone so full of fire would be dynamic and changing during her life. What's interesting about reading her writing chronologically is hopefully I'll see the various changes over time (vs. seeing them in random contradictory excerpts). This is definitely worthwhile in building up a fuller picture of Dworkin, but it's not my favourite work of hers. show less
The "facts" about fairies... well, I'll have to read up on what was accepted at the time, but right now I have no idea where she got that from. I found the second half of the book started to show more break down a bit with the sections on "androgyny". I'm not entirely sure why she decided to defend bestiality, but it's not a choice I would have made. I wasn't sure about the scientific material she used. I think Disorders of Sexual Development (DSDs) (intersex conditions) are becoming better understood now, and deserve a more rigorous approach and a whole book (to deal with scientific, ethical, social issues and present opposing theories).
This was her first book, so I'm not sure what I was expecting - obviously someone so full of fire would be dynamic and changing during her life. What's interesting about reading her writing chronologically is hopefully I'll see the various changes over time (vs. seeing them in random contradictory excerpts). This is definitely worthwhile in building up a fuller picture of Dworkin, but it's not my favourite work of hers. show less
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