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14+ Works 2,327 Members 28 Reviews 6 Favorited

About the Author

Katherine Murray Millett was born in St. Paul, Minnesota on September 14, 1934. She graduated from the University of Minnesota in 1956. After teaching briefly at the University of North Carolina, she pursued her art career in Japan and then New York, where she took a job at Barnard College teaching show more English literature. She received a PhD from Columbia University. Her doctoral dissertation, Sexual Politics, was published in 1970. Her other books include Flying, Sita, Going to Iran, The Loony-Bin Trip, and Mother Millett. She died from cardiac arrest on September 6, 2017 at the age of 82. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
Image credit: Kate Millett, 1973

Works by Kate Millett

Sita (1976) 257 copies
Flying (1974) 236 copies, 1 review
The Loony-Bin Trip (1990) 229 copies, 6 reviews
A.D. A Memoir (1995) 37 copies
Going to Iran (1979) 25 copies
Mother Millett (2002) 21 copies
An Elegy for Sita (2020) 5 copies
Caterpillars: Journal Entries by 11 Women (1977) — Introduction — 1 copy

Associated Works

Sisterhood Is Powerful (1970) — Contributor — 626 copies, 4 reviews
The Norton Book of Women's Lives (1993) — Contributor — 444 copies, 1 review
The Portable Sixties Reader (2002) — Contributor — 365 copies, 2 reviews
I Never Told Anyone: Writings by Women Survivors of Child Sexual Abuse (1983) — Contributor — 183 copies, 1 review
Pleasure and Danger: Exploring Female Sexuality (1984) — Contributor — 141 copies, 1 review
Aphrodisiac, fiction from Christopher Street (1980) — Contributor — 133 copies, 1 review
Women on Women 3: A New Anthology of American Lesbian Fiction (1996) — Contributor — 112 copies, 2 reviews
A Virago Keepsake to Celebrate Twenty Years of Publishing (1993) — Contributor — 51 copies
Give Sorrow Words: Maryse Holder's Letters from Mexico (1979) — Introduction, some editions — 26 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Millett, Kate
Legal name
Millett, Katherine Murray
Birthdate
1934-09-14
Date of death
2017-09-06
Gender
female
Education
Columbia University (Ph.D|1970)
University of Oxford (BA|1958|St Hilda's College)
University of Minnesota (BA|1956)
Occupations
writer
painter
teacher
activist
Organizations
Kappa Alpha Theta
National Organization for Women
MindFreedom International
Awards and honors
Pioneer Award, Lamba Literary Foundation (2012)
National Women's Hall of Fame (2013)
Courage Award for the Arts (2012)
Relationships
Yoshimura, Fumio (husband | divorced)
Keir, Sophie (widow)
Short biography
Katherine Murray Millett (September 14, 1934 – September 6, 2017), better known as Kate Millett, was an American feminist writer, educator, artist, and activist. She attended Oxford University and was the first American woman to be awarded a degree with first-class honors after studying at St Hilda's College, Oxford. She has been described as "a seminal influence on second-wave feminism", and is best known for her book Sexual Politics (1970).
Cause of death
cardiac arrest
Nationality
USA
Birthplace
St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Places of residence
St. Paul, Minnesota, USA
Japan
La Grange, New York, USA
California, USA
New York, New York, USA
Place of death
Paris, Île-de-France, France
Map Location
USA

Members

Reviews

28 reviews
My favorite Tara Mills so far! Inspired by the secret life of a politician's wife, Ms. Mills weaves a memorable story full of intelligent wit and sexy sizzle. Justine Hubbard knows her marriage to an up and coming politician Gary is a sham, but she plays the game until meeting photographer Sean o'Donnell. Sean recognizes the deep loneliness in Justine because it is an emotion he knows well. The interplay between the two is so fun and sophisticated. The scene at the museum crackles with show more vitality and I laughed alongside the characters, even as my heart broke knowing their conundrum. A highly recommended read. show less
Millett has a lot to say about male dominance and the history of sexuality. Her book, Sexual Politics, has been called sensational and groundbreaking. Critics gush that she was original in her thought. Sexual Politics has been reviewed as well researched and historically significant. Traditional gender roles persist despite changes in sexual behavior and norms. Sexual identities and behaviors are shaped and controlled by society's influences. Millett opens Sexual Politics by breaking down show more works by authors like Henry Miller, Normal Mailer, and D.H. Lawrence. Line by line she interprets intimate scenes to demonstrate a man's power over women. Erotic moments are no longer playful or sensual. In turn they become acts of dominance, humiliation, and abuse. Women are described as gullible, manipulated, possessed, and compliant. Men are arrogant, controlling, and often times they demonstrate contempt for the women with whom they share intimacy. In the second half of Sexual Politics, Millett goes on to describe the Victorian age when it was common law that a woman ceased to be her own person once she entered marriage. Her wages, possessions, and even children became property of the man of the house. His wife assumed serf status. Millett explores the norms of patriarchy - violence is a "right" of the dominant male. Whole societies (tribal Africa and elsewhere) subscribe to the hierarchy. Women are sometimes idolized or patronized but always exploited. Male dominance has been a universal standard for centuries. Just look at Freud's clinical work. He was the king of the penis envy theory and had the idea that women were just castrated males ("...maternal desires rest upon the last vestige of penile aspiration" p 185). Women cannot advance knowledge because of their lack of a penis - you cannot put out a fire without "equipment."
Remember the attitudes towards women in Nazi Germany during World War II...
All in all, Sexual Politics was depressing to read. Consider this: if you are a woman and you work in an occupation that serves others (teacher, nurse, governess), you are a servant or slave. If you are a live-in caretaker you are no better than a prisoner, kept under surveillance. Millet has this way of taking ordinary situations and turning them on their heads.
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Em honra de Kate Millett (1934 - 2017)

Uma dos baluartes da segunda onda feminista, Millett reverberou tudo que havia de errado com o backlash pós-sufrágio que as feministas sofreram no século XX e essa é uma tentativa de desmistificar tudo que o saber-poder masculino tentou nos impingir durante séculos.
A primeira parte do livro abrange todo o período histórico e cultural considerado como a primeira revolução sexual, de 1830 a 1930, Wollstonecraft, Mill, Engels, Charlotte Bronte, show more Thomas Hardy, George Meredith, Oscar Wilde, Ibsen são contrapostos a Rossetti, Ruskin, Tennyson no delinear de como eram vistas as mulheres no século XIX e o que historicamente estava acontecendo nos EUA e Inglaterra para que as coisas mudassem com as sufragetes. Vemos duas visões díspares na sociedade vitoriana, primeiro a eficiente visão de John Stuart Mill descrita em A Sujeição das Mulheres e a insípida e tenebrosa visão de John Ruskin.
Na segunda parte do livro temos os exemplos da contra-revolução, o backlash, primeiro exemplificado com as diferenças ocorridas na sociedade alemã com o nazismo, de como as mulheres voltaram a serem vistas como "parideiras" do Estado. Logo a seguir vemos como a Revolução Russa foi libertária para as mulheres dando-lhes direito ao aborto e à igualdade social para logo em seguida com o advento do stalinismo serem novamente relegadas à condição de párias sociais.
O créme de la créme dessa segunda parte do livro é a extensiva análise sobre o reacionarismo freudiano e o quanto a visão equivocada de Freud sobre as mulheres as prejudicou no século XX e foi pedra de toque para os movimentos reacionários com relação à política sexual. De fato, tudo que Freud escreveu e falou sobre as mulheres é um show de horrores, é humanamente impossível lê-los e extrair algo de bom daquilo, é de uma misoginia sem parâmetros, o que acabou obscurecendo a mente dos pós-freudianos e dos funcionalistas também.
Enfim, livro fundamental sobre a história da política sexual, assim como baluarte do movimento feminista.
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My favorite Tara Mills so far! Inspired by the secret life of a politician's wife, Ms. Mills weaves a memorable story full of intelligent wit and sexy sizzle. Justine Hubbard knows her marriage to an up and coming politician Gary is a sham, but she plays the game until meeting photographer Sean o'Donnell. Sean recognizes the deep loneliness in Justine because it is an emotion he knows well. The interplay between the two is so fun and sophisticated. The scene at the museum crackles with show more vitality and I laughed alongside the characters, even as my heart broke knowing their conundrum. A highly recommended read. show less

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Statistics

Works
14
Also by
13
Members
2,327
Popularity
#11,021
Rating
3.8
Reviews
28
ISBNs
105
Languages
10
Favorited
6

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