Dead Blondes And Bad Mothers: Monstrosity, Patriarchy, and the Fear of Female Power
By (Author) Sady Doyle
Melville House Publishing
Melville House Publishing
13th August 2019
United States
General
Non Fiction
305.4
Paperback
300
Width 140mm, Height 210mm
The Female Monster is alive and well in the pop-cultural imagination. What does she tell us about ourselves and how we live today Funny, smart and encyclopedic, nimbly addressing everyone from the biblical Lilith, to the movie Carrie, to Hae Min Lee (whose death was the focus of the first season of "Serial") te the cult film "The Craft", this book explores the female dark side, as represented in female monsters throughout pop culture. These monsters express taboo truths about female life and femininity. They embody patriarchal fear of women. They speak to urges women are encouraged to hide, or deny. They also speak to the viciousness with which a sexist society inflicts traditionally feminine roles upon us. This is a sympathetic-or, at least, curious-look at the women we fear and what they show us about how women navigate a dangerous and frightening world.
"Sady Doyle is an absolutely essential voice in this moment of moral panic. As we continue the battle for gender equality, her writing grounds the fight in a refreshing dose of sanity. I recommend it to anyone interested in remaining sane."-- Lauren Duca, author of How to Start a Revolution: Young People and the Future of American Politics "Sady Doyle has created a chimera of a book: simultaneously a crackling great read full of riveting stories, and a damning indictment of how our culture represses what it can't control. It's hard to read, at times, but also necessary and validating, swashbuckling without being careless, powerful and funny and compelling throughout."-- Emily Gould, And the Heart Says Whatever "Sady Doyle's provocative and incisive cultural commentary is consistently several steps ahead of mainstream political analysis. What, today, is more important that an examination of our society's fear of women and power, a topic Doyle has studied down years. Her deep understanding and witty, engaging analysis will make you see the world in a whole new, and important, way."--Soraya Chemaly, author of Rage Becomes Her: The Power of Women's Anger "Thoughtful and compelling, Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers is alternately refreshing and comforting, fascinating and infuriating. Doyle shines a light into dark corners where feminine rage and violence lurk..."-- Cherie Priest, award-winning author of The Family Plot "From history to pop-culture, Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers lays bare the violence and structured misogyny we don't want to see. She has ripped the blinders off."--Nancy Schwartzman, Director Roll Red Roll, Founder, Circle of 6 "Sady Doyle has redrawn the lines in the cultural sand with Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers. Combining history, folklore, true crime, personal anecdotes and horror films Doyle has written a book that redefines the female experience, emboldening, empowering and expanding it beyond its preconceived confines. Beautifully written, devastatingly funny, and exhaustively researched Dead Blondes and Bad Mothers is a deeply necessary and urgent book."-- Alexandra West, author of The 1990s Teen Horror Cycle: Final Girls and a New Hollywood Formula "An eye-opening treatment of an issue that could not be more timely: the pathologization and demonization of women's power."-- Kate Manne, author of Down Girl: The Logic of Misogyny "Sady Doyle opens my eyes, and challenges my beliefs, with a combination of historical perspective, fascinating portraits, psychological insight, and just damn good writing." -- Andrew Jenks, host of What Really Happened "Doyle delivers a defense and embrace of the feminine grotesque." -- Erika M. Anderson (EMA), musician and multimedia artist "Why are powerful women so scary to us, and what myths keep them that way A macabre, witty, and often bone-chilling look at the way patriarchy has contained and neutralized women's power throughout the ages by construing it as monstrous, Doyle pulls off her dazzling synthesis in page-turning prose that makes it clear what the real monster is--patriarchy--and leaves us with the hope that by embracing the monstrous within ourselves, we might just slay it." -- Amy Gentry, author of Good as Gone and Last Woman Standing "Sady Doyle successfully reframes patriarchy itself. It is not, as we have been told, the natural order of things: where men are fated to lead, absent any consideration to women. Instead, it is a system that was unnaturally constructed in fear of women. And now, as we reach what feels to be the end, the imagined monsters we have always made of women must become the very real monsters that are the only beings capable of breaking the system entirely."-- Zack Akers, creator of Limetown podcast and TV series "This book blew me away. Step by inexorable, logical, sure-footed step, Sady Doyle lays bare how patriarchy traps us in the stories it tells about us, and how these stories are a form of violence in themselves. Fueled by rage and spiked, like a nail bomb, with humor, this book feels like the lights coming on suddenly, just in time to see the roaches scatter."-- Carina Chocano, bestselling author of You Play the Girl: On Playboy Bunnies, Princesses, Trainwrecks and Other Man-Made Women "Wrested from the sanitized grasp of corporate jargon and cliches, Doyle acquaints readers uneasily with the brutal, corporeal roots of our language and rituals around power: corrupt, degrade, gag, discipline, condemn, expel..."-- Alana Massey, author of All The Lives I Want: Essays About My Best Friends Who Happen To Be Famous Strangers
Sady Doyle is the author of Trainwreck: The Women We Love to Hate, Mock, and Fear . . . and Why. Her work has appeared in In These Times, The Guardian, Elle.com, The Atlantic, Slate, Buzzfeed, Rookie, among other publications. She is the founder of the blog Tiger Beatdown, and won the first-ever Women's Media Center Social Media Award. She's been featured in Rookie: Yearbook One and Yearbook Two, and contributed to the Book of Jezebel.