George Sand, antisex feminist

George Sand's feminist novels of the 1830s often seem to have a “problem” with sex, or to view sex as a problem. In them, heterosexual sex often appears disempowering for women and therefore politically unpalatable; worse, heterosexual desire itself emerges as primordially marked by patriarchal...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Counter, A
Format: Journal article
Language:English
Published: Duke University Press 2023
_version_ 1797111464348090368
author Counter, A
author_facet Counter, A
author_sort Counter, A
collection OXFORD
description George Sand's feminist novels of the 1830s often seem to have a “problem” with sex, or to view sex as a problem. In them, heterosexual sex often appears disempowering for women and therefore politically unpalatable; worse, heterosexual desire itself emerges as primordially marked by patriarchal constraints, predicated on the (self‐)objectification and subjection of women. This article offers a speculative reading of Sand's early fictions as anticipating similar “antisex” attitudes in later twentieth‐century feminism (the so‐called antipornography feminism of the 1980s), and uses close readings of moments in Indiana, Mauprat, and Lélia to reflect on the renewed urgency—in the wake of #MeToo—of the sort of ethical questions raised by such feminism during the “sex wars.” If Sand is not, ultimately, an antisex feminist, her novels are nevertheless thought‐provoking in their skepticism, or their pessimistic realism, about the possibility of a politically or ethically motivated reform of sex and desire.
first_indexed 2024-03-07T08:10:46Z
format Journal article
id oxford-uuid:3772df57-243c-461a-8ad9-9fa1ac359299
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-03-07T08:10:46Z
publishDate 2023
publisher Duke University Press
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:3772df57-243c-461a-8ad9-9fa1ac3592992023-11-24T09:23:14ZGeorge Sand, antisex feministJournal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:3772df57-243c-461a-8ad9-9fa1ac359299EnglishSymplectic ElementsDuke University Press2023Counter, AGeorge Sand's feminist novels of the 1830s often seem to have a “problem” with sex, or to view sex as a problem. In them, heterosexual sex often appears disempowering for women and therefore politically unpalatable; worse, heterosexual desire itself emerges as primordially marked by patriarchal constraints, predicated on the (self‐)objectification and subjection of women. This article offers a speculative reading of Sand's early fictions as anticipating similar “antisex” attitudes in later twentieth‐century feminism (the so‐called antipornography feminism of the 1980s), and uses close readings of moments in Indiana, Mauprat, and Lélia to reflect on the renewed urgency—in the wake of #MeToo—of the sort of ethical questions raised by such feminism during the “sex wars.” If Sand is not, ultimately, an antisex feminist, her novels are nevertheless thought‐provoking in their skepticism, or their pessimistic realism, about the possibility of a politically or ethically motivated reform of sex and desire.
spellingShingle Counter, A
George Sand, antisex feminist
title George Sand, antisex feminist
title_full George Sand, antisex feminist
title_fullStr George Sand, antisex feminist
title_full_unstemmed George Sand, antisex feminist
title_short George Sand, antisex feminist
title_sort george sand antisex feminist
work_keys_str_mv AT countera georgesandantisexfeminist