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Camille Paglia

Camille Anna Paglia (/ˈpɑːliə/; born April 2, 1947) is an American academic and social critic, who defines herself as a feminist. Paglia has been a professor at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, since 1984.[1] She is critical of many aspects of modern culture[2][3] and is the author of Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson (1990) and other books. She is also a critic of contemporary American feminism and of post-structuralism, as well as a commentator on multiple aspects of American culture such as its visual art, music, and film history.

Camille Paglia
Paglia in 2017
BornCamille Anna Paglia
(1947-04-02) April 2, 1947 (age 76)
Endicott, New York, U.S.
OccupationProfessor, cultural critic
EducationBinghamton University (BA)
Yale University (MA, PhD)
SubjectsPopular culture, art, poetry, sex, film, feminism, politics
Literary movementIndividualist feminism

Personal life Edit

Paglia was born in Endicott, New York, the eldest child[4] of Pasquale and Lydia Anne (née Colapietro) Paglia. All four of her grandparents were born in Italy. Her mother immigrated to the United States at five years old from Ceccano, in the province of Frosinone, Lazio, Italy.[2][5] Paglia has stated that her father's side of the family was from the Campanian towns of Avellino, Benevento, and Caserta.[6] Paglia was raised Roman Catholic,[7] and attended primary school in rural Oxford, New York, where her family lived in a working farmhouse.[8] Her father, a veteran of World War II,[9] taught at the Oxford Academy high school and exposed his young daughter to art through books he brought home about French art history. In 1957, her family moved to Syracuse, New York, so that her father could begin graduate school; he eventually became a professor of Romance languages at Le Moyne College.[10] She attended the Edward Smith Elementary School, T. Aaron Levy Junior High, and Nottingham Senior High School.[11] In 1992, Carmelia Metosh, her Latin teacher for three years, said, "She always has been controversial. Whatever statements were being made (in class), she had to challenge them. She made good points then, as she does now."[12] Paglia thanked Metosh in the acknowledgements to Sexual Personae, later describing her as "the dragon lady of Latin studies, who breathed fire at principals and school boards".[11]

During her stays at a summer Girl Scout[13] camp in Thendara, New York, she took on a variety of new names, including Anastasia (her confirmation name, inspired by the film Anastasia), Stacy, and Stanley.[14] A crucially significant event for her was when an outhouse exploded after she poured too much quicklime into the latrine. "That symbolized everything I would do with my life and work. Excess and extravagance and explosiveness. I would be someone who would look into the latrine of culture, into pornography and crime and psychopathology... and I would drop the bomb into it".[15][16]

For more than a decade, Paglia was the partner of artist Alison Maddex.[17][18] Paglia legally adopted Maddex's son (who was born in 2002).[19] In 2007, the couple separated[20] but remained "harmonious co-parents", in the words of Paglia, who lived two miles (three kilometers) apart.[4]

Paglia is an atheist, and has stated she has "a very spiritual mystic view of the universe".[21]

Education Edit

Paglia entered Harpur College at Binghamton University in 1964.[22] The same year, Paglia's poem "Atrophy" was published in the local newspaper.[23] She later said that she was trained to read literature by poet Milton Kessler, who "believed in the responsiveness of the body, and of the activation of the senses to literature ... And oh did I believe in that".[24] She graduated from Harpur as class valedictorian in 1968.[10]

According to Paglia, while in college she punched a "marauding drunk",[16] and takes pride in having been put on probation for committing 39 pranks.[11]

Paglia attended Yale as a graduate student, and she claims to have been the only open lesbian at Yale Graduate School from 1968 to 1972.[16][25] At Yale, Paglia quarreled with Rita Mae Brown, whom she later characterized as "then darkly nihilist," and argued with the New Haven, Connecticut, Women's Liberation Rock Band when they dismissed the Rolling Stones as sexist.[26] Paglia was mentored by Harold Bloom.[22] Sexual Personae was then titled "The Androgynous Dream: the image of the androgyne as it appears in literature and is embodied in the psyche of the artist, with reference to the visual arts and the cinema."[27]

Paglia read Susan Sontag and aspired to emulate what she called her "celebrity, her positioning in the media world at the border of the high arts and popular culture." Paglia first saw Sontag in person on October 15, 1969 (Vietnam Moratorium Day), when Paglia, then a Yale graduate student, was visiting a friend at Princeton. In 1973, Paglia, a militant feminist and open lesbian, was working at her first academic job at Bennington College. She considered Sontag a radical who had challenged male dominance. The same year, Paglia drove to an appearance by Sontag at Dartmouth, hoping to arrange for her to speak at Bennington, but found it difficult to find the money for Sontag's speaking fee; Paglia relied on help from Richard Tristman, a friend of Sontag's, to persuade her to come. Bennington College agreed to pay Sontag $700 (twice what they usually offered speakers but only half Sontag's usual fee) to give a talk about contemporary issues. Paglia staged a poster campaign urging students to attend Sontag's appearance. Sontag arrived at Bennington Carriage Barn, where she was to speak, more than an hour late, and then began reading what Paglia recalled as a "boring and bleak" short story about "nothing" in the style of a French New Novel.[28]

As a result of Sontag's Bennington College appearance, Paglia began to become disenchanted with her, believing that she had withdrawn from confrontation with the academic world, and that her "mandarin disdain" for popular culture showed an elitism that betrayed her early work, which had suggested that high and low culture both reflected a new sensibility.[28]

Career Edit

In the autumn of 1972, Paglia began teaching at Bennington College, which hired her in part thanks to a recommendation from Harold Bloom.[29] At Bennington, she befriended the philosopher James Fessenden, who first taught there in the same semester.[30]

Through her study of the classics and the scholarly work of Jane Ellen Harrison, James George Frazer, Erich Neumann and others, Paglia developed a theory of sexual history that contradicted a number of ideas fashionable at the time, hence her criticism of Marija Gimbutas, Carolyn Heilbrun, Kate Millett and others. She laid out her ideas on matriarchy, androgyny, homosexuality, sadomasochism and other topics in her Yale PhD thesis Sexual Personae: The Androgyne in Literature and Art, which she defended in December 1974. In September 1976, she gave a public lecture drawing on that dissertation,[31] in which she discussed Edmund Spenser's The Faerie Queene, followed by remarks on Diana Ross, Gracie Allen, Yul Brynner, and Stéphane Audran.[32]

Paglia wrote that she "nearly came to blows with the founding members of the women's studies program at the State University of New York at Albany, when they categorically denied that hormones influence human experience or behavior".[33] Similar fights with feminists and academics culminated in a 1978 incident[further explanation needed] which led her to resign from Bennington; after a lengthy standoff with the administration, Paglia accepted a settlement from the college and resigned in 1979.[29]

Paglia finished Sexual Personae in the early 1980s, but could not get it published. She supported herself with visiting and part-time teaching jobs at Yale, Wesleyan, and other Connecticut colleges. Her paper, "The Apollonian Androgyne and the Faerie Queene", was published in English Literary Renaissance, Winter 1979, and her dissertation was cited by J. Hillis Miller in his April 1980 article "Wuthering Heights and the Ellipses of Interpretation", in Journal of Religion in Literature, but her academic career was otherwise stalled. In a 1995 letter to Boyd Holmes, she recalled: "I earned a little extra money by doing some local features reporting for a New Haven alternative newspaper (The Advocate) in the early 1980s". She wrote articles on New Haven's historic pizzerias and on an old house that was a stop on the Underground Railroad.[34]

In 1984, she joined the faculty of the Philadelphia College of Performing Arts, which merged in 1987 with the Philadelphia College of Art to become the University of the Arts.

Paglia is on the editorial board of the classics and humanities journal Arion.[35] She wrote a regular column for Salon.com from 1995 to 2001, and again from 2007 to 2009. Paglia resumed writing a Salon.com column in 2016.[36]

Paglia cooperated with Carl Rollyson and Lisa Paddock in their writing of Susan Sontag: The Making of an Icon, sending them detailed letters from which they quoted with her permission. Rollyson and Paddock note that Sontag "had her lawyer put our publisher on notice" when she realized that they were investigating her life and career.[28]

Paglia participates in the decennial poll of film professionals conducted by Sight & Sound which asks participants to submit a list of what they believe to be the ten greatest films of all time. According to her responses to the poll in 2002, 2012, and 2022, the films Paglia holds in highest regard include Ben-Hur, Blowup, Citizen Kane, La Dolce Vita, The Godfather, The Godfather: Part II, Gone with the Wind, Lawrence of Arabia, North by Northwest, Orphée, Persona, 2001: A Space Odyssey, The Ten Commandments, and Vertigo.[37][38][39]

In 2005, Paglia was named as one of the top 100 public intellectuals by the journals Foreign Policy and Prospect.[19] In 2012, an article in The New York Times remarked that "[a]nyone who has been following the body count of the culture wars over the past decades knows Paglia".[40] Paglia has said that she is willing to have her entire career judged on the basis of her composition of what she considers to be "probably the most important sentence that she has ever written": "God is man's greatest idea."[41]

Views Edit

Feminism Edit

Though Paglia admires Simone de Beauvoir and The Second Sex ("the supreme work of modern feminism... its deep learning and massive argument are unsurpassed") as well as Germaine Greer,[22] Time critic Martha Duffy writes that Paglia "does not hesitate to hurl brazen insults" at several feminists. In an interview, Paglia stated that to be effective, one has to "name names"; criticism should be concrete. Paglia stated that many critics "escape into abstractions", rendering their criticism "intellectualized and tame".[42] Paglia was known as one of the scholars and feminists that theorized American singer Madonna within feminism and for which publications such as Vogue called her the "high priestess of post-feminism".[43]

Paglia accused Greer of becoming "a drone in three years" as a result of her early success; Paglia has also criticized the work of activist Diana Fuss.[10] Elaine Showalter calls Paglia "unique in the hyperbole and virulence of her hostility to virtually all the prominent feminist activists, public figures, writers and scholars of her generation", mentioning Carolyn Heilbrun, Judith Butler, Carol Gilligan, Marilyn French, Zoe Baird, Kimba Wood, Susan Thomases, and Hillary Clinton as targets of her criticism.[22] Paglia has accused Kate Millett of starting "the repressive, Stalinist style in feminist criticism."[44] Paglia has repeatedly criticized Patricia Ireland, former president of the National Organization for Women (NOW), calling her a "sanctimonious", unappealing role model for women[45] whose "smug, arrogant" attitude is accompanied by "painfully limited processes of thought".[46] Paglia contends that under Ireland's leadership, NOW "damaged and marginalized the women's movement".[47]

In 1999, Martha Nussbaum wrote an essay called "The Professor of Parody", in which she criticized Judith Butler for retreating to abstract theory disconnected from real world problems.[48] Paglia reacted to the essay by stating that the criticism was "long overdue", but characterized the criticism as "one PC diva turning against another". She criticized Nussbaum for failing to make her criticisms earlier while accusing her of borrowing Paglia's ideas without acknowledgement. She called Nussbaum's "preparation or instinct for sex analysis... dubious at best", but nevertheless stated that "Nussbaum is a genuine scholar who operates on a vastly higher intellectual level than Butler".[49]

Many feminists have criticized Paglia; Christina Hoff Sommers calls her "Perhaps the most conspicuous target of feminist opprobrium," noting that the Women's Review of Books described Sexual Personae as patriarchy's "counter-assault on feminism". Sommers relates that when Paglia appeared at a Brown University forum, feminists signed a petition censuring her and demanding an investigation into procedures for inviting speakers to the campus.[50] Some feminist critics have characterized Paglia as an "anti-feminist feminist", critical of central features of much contemporary feminism but holding out "her own special variety of feminist affirmation".[51]

Naomi Wolf traded a series of sometimes personal attacks with Paglia throughout the early 1990s. In The New Republic, Wolf wrote that Paglia "poses as a sexual renegade but is in fact the most dutiful of patriarchal daughters" and characterized Paglia as intellectually dishonest.[52][53][54][55] In a 1991 speech, Paglia criticized Wolf for blaming anorexia on the media, calling Wolf a "twit".[56] Gloria Steinem said of Paglia that, "Her calling herself a feminist is sort of like a Nazi saying they're not anti-Semitic."[57] Paglia called Steinem "the Stalin of feminism".[58] Katha Pollitt calls Paglia one of a "seemingly endless parade of social critics [who] have achieved celebrity by portraying not sexism but feminism as the problem". Pollitt writes that Paglia has glorified "male dominance", and has been able to get away with things "that might make even Rush Limbaugh blanch," because she is a woman.[59]

Paglia's view that rape is sexually motivated has been endorsed by evolutionary psychologists Randy Thornhill and Craig T. Palmer; they comment that "Paglia... urges women to be skeptical toward the feminist 'party line' on the subject, to become better informed about risk factors, and to use the information to lower their risk of rape".[60]

In an essay critiquing the Hollywood/celebrity fad of "Girl Squads", made popular in 2015 by pop-icons like Taylor Swift, Paglia argued that rather than empowering women the cliquish practice actually harms the self-esteem of those who are not rich, famous, or attractive enough to belong to the group, while further defining women only by a very narrow, often sexualized stereotype. She challenged that to be truly empowering, these groups need to mentor, advise, and be more inclusive, for more women to realize their true, individual potential.[61]

Transgender people Edit

Though she has not transitioned, Paglia identifies as transgender.[62] She reports having gender dysphoria since childhood, and says that "never once in my life have I felt female".[63] She says that she was "donning flamboyant male costumes from early childhood on".[62]

Nevertheless, Paglia says that she is "highly skeptical about the current transgender wave" which she thinks has been produced by "far more complicated psychological and sociological factors than current gender discourse allows". She writes that "In a democracy, everyone, no matter how nonconformist or eccentric, should be free from harassment and abuse. But at the same time, no one deserves special rights, protections, or privileges on the basis of their eccentricity."[62]

Paglia's views led to a petition demanding that the University of the Arts remove her from their faculty, but the university rejected it. Paglia considered it "a publicity stunt" and praised the university's "eloquent statement affirming academic freedom [as] a landmark in contemporary education."[64]

Climate change Edit

Paglia has long rejected the scientific consensus on global warming, which she describes as "the political agenda that has slowly accrued" around the issue of climate change.[65] In a 2017 interview with The Weekly Standard, Paglia stated, "It is certainly ironic how liberals who posture as defenders of science when it comes to global warming (a sentimental myth unsupported by evidence) flee all reference to biology when it comes to gender."[62]

French academia Edit

Paglia is critical of the influence many postwar French writers have had on the humanities, claiming that universities are in the "thrall" of French post-structuralists;[66] that in the works of Jean Baudrillard, Jacques Derrida, Jacques Lacan and Michel Foucault, she never once found a sentence that interested her.[67] François Cusset writes that Paglia, like other major American public intellectuals after World War II, owes her broader recognition mainly to the political repercussions of polemics that first erupted on college campuses, in her case to a polemic against foreign intellectualism. He says she achieved phenomenal success when she called Foucault a "bastard", thereby providing (together with Alan Sokal's Social Text parody) the best evidence for Paul de Man's view that theory should be defined negatively, based on the opposition it arouses.[68]

However, Paglia's assessment of French writers is not purely negative. She has called Simone de Beauvoir's The Second Sex (1949) "brilliant and imperious" and she traces the lineage of her "dissident feminism", not from Betty Friedan but from Beauvoir. Paglia also identified Jean-Paul Sartre's work as part of a high period in literature. She has praised Roland Barthes's Mythologies (1957) and Gilles Deleuze's Masochism: Coldness and Cruelty (1967), while finding both men's later work flawed. Of Gaston Bachelard, who influenced Paglia, she wrote "[his] dignified yet fluid phenomenological descriptive method seemed to me ideal for art", adding that he was "the last modern French writer I took seriously".[69][70][71]

Politics Edit

Paglia characterizes herself as a libertarian.[66][72] She opposes laws against prostitution, pornography, drugs, and abortion. She is also opposed to affirmative action laws.[73][74] Some of her views have been characterized as conservative, although when asked in 2017 if she considers herself a cultural conservative she replied: "No, not at all... Conservative would mean I was cleaving to something past which was great, and no longer is... and usually I'm not saying we should return to anything. I do believe we're moving inexorably into the future."[10][75]

Paglia criticized Bill Clinton for not resigning after the Monica Lewinsky scandal, which she says "paralyzed the government for two years, leading directly to our blindsiding by 9/11".[76] In the 2000 U.S. presidential campaign, she voted for the Green Party candidate Ralph Nader "[because] I detest the arrogant, corrupt superstructure of the Democratic Party, with which I remain stubbornly registered."[76]

In the 2004 U.S. presidential election, Paglia supported John Kerry, and in 2008 she supported Barack Obama.[77] In 2012, she supported Green Party candidate Jill Stein.[78] Paglia was highly critical of 2016 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton, calling her a "fraud" and a "liar".[79] Paglia refused to support either Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump in the 2016 U.S. presidential election, indicating in a March Salon column that if Hillary Clinton won the Democratic Party's nomination, she would either cast a write-in vote for Bernie Sanders or else vote for Green Party candidate Stein, as she did in 2012.[80] Paglia later clarified in a statement that she would vote for Stein.[81] In 2017, she stated that she is a registered Democrat who voted for Bernie Sanders in the 2016 Democratic primary and for Jill Stein in the 2016 general election.[62] For the 2020 U.S. presidential election, Paglia criticized the Democratic Party for lacking a coherent message and a strong candidate. She disavowed Sanders as being "way too old and creaky" and retracted her initial support for Kamala Harris for missing "a huge opportunity to play a moderating, statesmanlike role."[82] Citing the "need to project steadiness, substance, and warmth," Paglia expressed interest in Cheri Bustos and Steve Bullock as potential candidates.[82]

Child sexuality Edit

In accordance with a highly politicised view of child abuse, Paglia notably commented in an interview in 1992: "In the case of Sinead O'Connor, child abuse was justified". This was her response to the singer's action on Saturday Night Live, where she tore up a picture of the pope in protest of the unfolding child sexual abuse scandal surrounding the Catholic Church.[1] In 1993, Paglia signed a manifesto supporting NAMBLA, a pederasty and pedophilia advocacy organization.[83][84] In 1994, Paglia supported lowering the legal age of consent to 14. She noted in a 1995 interview with pro-pedophile activist Bill Andriette, "I fail to see what is wrong with erotic fondling with any age."[85][86] In a 1997 Salon column, Paglia expressed the view that male pedophilia correlates with the heights of a civilization, stating "I have repeatedly protested the lynch-mob hysteria that dogs the issue of man-boy love. In Sexual Personae, I argued that male pedophilia is intricately intertwined with the cardinal moments of Western civilization."[84] Paglia noted in several interviews, as well as Sexual Personae, that she supports the legalization of certain forms of child pornography.[87][88][85]

She later changed her views on the matter. In an interview for Radio New Zealand's Saturday Morning show, conducted on April 28, 2018, by Kim Hill, Paglia was asked, "Are you a libertarian on the issue of pedophilia?", to which she replied, "In terms of the present day, I think it's absolutely impossible to think we could reproduce the Athenian code of pedophilia, of boy-love, that was central to culture at that time. [...] We must protect children, and I feel that very very strongly. The age of consent for sexual interactions between a boy and an older man is obviously disputed, at what point that should be. I used to think that fourteen (the way it is in some places in the world) was adequate. I no longer think that. I think young people need greater protection than that. [...] This is one of those areas that we must confine to the realm of imagination and the history of the arts."[89]

Books Edit

Sexual Personae Edit

Paglia's Sexual Personae was rejected by at least seven different publishers before it was published by Yale University Press, whereupon it became a best seller, reaching seventh place on the paperback best-seller list, a rare accomplishment for a scholarly book.[10] 'Paglia called it her "prison book", commenting, "I felt like Cervantes, Genet. It took all the resources of being Catholic to cut myself off and sit in my cell."[22] Sexual Personae has been called an "energetic, Freud-friendly reading of Western art", one that seemed "heretical and perverse", at the height of political correctness; according to Daniel Nester, its characterization of "William Blake as the British Marquis de Sade or Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson as 'self-ruling hermaphrodites who cannot mate' still pricks up many an English major's ears".[24]

In the book, Paglia argues that human nature has an inherently dangerous Dionysian or chthonic aspect, especially in regard to sexuality.[90] Culture and civilization are created by men and represent an attempt to contain that force.[90] Women are powerful, too, but as natural forces, and both marriage and religion are means to contain chaotic forces.[10] A best seller, it was described by Terry Teachout in a New York Times book review as being both "intellectually stimulating" and "exasperating".[91] Sexual Personae received critical reviews from numerous feminist scholars.[92] Anthony Burgess described Sexual Personae as "a fine disturbing book" that "seeks to attack the reader's emotions as well as his or her prejudices".[93]

Sex, Art and American Culture Edit

External video
  Presentation by Paglia on Sex, Art and American Culture, October 26, 1994, C-SPAN

Sex, Art and American Culture: Essays (1992) is a collection of short pieces, many published previously as editorials or reviews, and some transcripts of interviews.[74] The essays cover such subjects as Madonna, Elizabeth Taylor, rock music, Robert Mapplethorpe, the Clarence Thomas Supreme Court nomination, rape, Marlon Brando, drag, Milton Kessler, and academia. It made The New York Times bestseller list for paperbacks.[94]

Vamps and Tramps Edit

Vamps and Tramps: New Essays (1994) is a collection of 42 short articles and a long essay, "No Law in the Arena: a Pagan Theory of Sexuality". It also contains a collection of cartoons from newspapers about Paglia. Writing for The New York Times, Wendy Steiner wrote "Comic, camp, outspoken, Ms. Paglia throws an absurdist shoe into the ponderous wheels of academia".[95] Michiko Kakutani, also writing for The New York Times, wrote: "Her writings on education ... are highly persuasive, just as some of her essays on the perils of regulating pornography and the puritanical excesses of the women's movement radiate a fierce common sense ... Unfortunately, Ms. Paglia has a way of undermining her more interesting arguments with flip, hyperbolic declarations".[96]

The Birds Edit

In 1998, in commemoration of the 35th anniversary of the release of Alfred Hitchcock's film The Birds, the British Film Institute commissioned Paglia to write a book about the film. The book interprets the film as "in the main line of British Romanticism descending from the raw nature-tableaux and sinister femme-fatales of Coleridge".[97] Paglia uses a psychoanalytic framework to interpret the film as portraying "a release of primitive forces of sex and appetite that have been subdued but never fully tamed".[98]

Break, Blow, Burn Edit

Break, Blow, Burn: Camille Paglia Reads Forty-three of the World's Best Poems (2005) is a collection of 43 short selections of verse with an accompanying essay by Paglia.[99] The collection is oriented primarily to those unfamiliar with the works.[99] Clive James wrote that Paglia tends to focus on American works as it moves from Shakespeare forward through time, with Yeats, following Coleridge, as the last European discussed,[99] but emphasized her range of sympathy and her ability to juxtapose and unite distinct art forms in her analysis.[99]

Glittering Images Edit

Glittering Images: A Journey Through Art from Egypt to Star Wars (2012) is a series of essays about notable works of art from ancient to modern times, published in October 2012.[100] Writer John Adams of The New York Times Book Review was skeptical of the book, accusing it of being "so agenda driven and so riddled with polemic asides that its potential to persuade is forever being compromised".[40] Gary Rosen of The Wall Street Journal, however, praised the book's "impressive range" and accessibility to readers.[101]

Free Women, Free Men Edit

External video
  Presentation by Paglia on Free Women, Free Men, March 20, 2017, C-SPAN

Paglia's Free Women, Free Men: Sex, Gender, and Feminism was published by Pantheon in 2017.[102] It is a series of essays from 1990 onward. Dwight Garner in The New York Times wrote Paglia's essays address two main targets: modern feminism, which, Paglia writes, "has become a catchall vegetable drawer where bunches of clingy sob sisters can store their moldy neuroses," and modern American universities, of which she asks, "How is it possible that today's academic left has supported rather than protested campus speech codes as well as the grotesque surveillance and overregulation of student life?"[103]

Provocations Edit

Paglia's fourth essay collection, Provocations: Collected Essays on Art, Feminism, Politics, Sex, and Education, was published by Pantheon on October 9, 2018.[104]

Works Edit

  • The Androgyne in Literature and Art (1974; PhD thesis)
  • Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson (1990) ISBN 0-679-73579-8
  • Sex, Art and American Culture: Essays (1992) ISBN 0-679-74101-1
  • Vamps and Tramps: New Essays (1994) ISBN 0-679-75120-3
  • The Birds (BFI Film Classics) (1998) ISBN 0-851-70651-7
  • Break, Blow, Burn: Camille Paglia Reads Forty-three of the World's Best Poems (2005) ISBN 0-375-42084-3
  • Glittering Images: A Journey Through Art from Egypt to Star Wars (2012) ISBN 978-0-375-42460-1
  • Free Women, Free Men: Sex, Gender, and Feminism (2017) ISBN 978-0-375424779
  • Provocations: Collected Essays (2018) ISBN 978-1-52474689-6

References Edit

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  3. ^ Handler, Richard (May 23, 2009). "An atheist's defence of religion: The paradox of Camille Paglia, the cultural gunslinger". CBC News.
  4. ^ a b Patterson, Christina (August 25, 2012). "Camille Paglia – 'I don't get along with lesbians at all. They don't like me, and I don't like them'". The Independent. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
  5. ^ You tube, Google[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ Paglia 1994, p. 61.
  7. ^ Varadaraja, Tunku (August 30, 2019). "A Feminist Capitalist Professor Under Fire". The Wall Street Journal. from the original on December 30, 2019.
  8. ^ "Arcadia", Financial Times, p. 22, March 15, 1997
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  12. ^ McKeever, James 'Jim' (November 22, 1992). "Hurricane Camille". Syracuse Herald American. Syracuse, NY.
  13. ^ "A Short History of the Beaverkill Valley". Friends of Beaverkill Community. Retrieved March 31, 2019.
  14. ^ Paglia 1994, p. 428–29.
  15. ^ Lavin, Cheryl (December 8, 1994). "Camille Paglia!". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved January 18, 2017.
  16. ^ a b c Steiner, Wendy (November 20, 1994). "Advertisements for Themselves". The New York Times.
  17. ^ Hamilton, William L (March 11, 1999). "In a New Museum, a Blue Period". The New York Times. Archived from the original on January 30, 2013.
  18. ^ Lauerman, Kerry (April 7, 2005). . Salon. Archived from the original on January 23, 2011. Retrieved October 9, 2010.
  19. ^ a b Wente, Margaret (October 18, 2007). "Camille Paglia: Hillary Clinton can't win – and shouldn't". The Globe & Mail. Toronto.
  20. ^ "Camille Paglia: Gay Activists 'Childish' for Demanding Rights". Towleroad. June 25, 2009. Retrieved June 28, 2012.
  21. ^ "Camille Paglia discusses 'Free Women, Free Men: Sex, Gender, Feminism" (PDF). Seattle Public Library. Retrieved June 12, 2022.
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  27. ^ Paglia, Camille A (February 13, 1972), To Professor Carolyn Heilbrun (letter), Austin, Texas: Knopf Archive, Humanities Research Center
  28. ^ a b c Rollyson, Carl; Paddock, Lisa (2000), Susan Sontag: The Making of an Icon, New York: WW Norton & Co
  29. ^ a b Findlay, Heather (September 2000), "Interview", Girlfriends magazine
  30. ^ Paglia 1994, p. 202.
  31. ^ "Lecture by Camille Paglia", Bennington Banner, September 20, 1976
  32. ^ Interview, November 2002
  33. ^ Paglia, Camille (June 17, 1998), "Letter to the Editor", Chronicle of Higher Education
  34. ^ Paglia, Camille (February 1995), To Boyd Holmes (letter)
  35. ^ . Boston University. Archived from the original on July 8, 2012. Retrieved June 28, 2012.
  36. ^ Paglia, Camille (February 12, 2016). ""Sexism has nothing to do with it": Camille Paglia on Hillary Clinton, Gloria Steinem - and why New Hampshire women broke for Bernie Sanders". Salon.
  37. ^ , UK: Sight & Sound via BFI, 2002, archived from the original on June 25, 2012
  38. ^ , UK: Sight & Sound via BFI, 2012, archived from the original on August 19, 2012
  39. ^ "Camille Paglia | BFI".
  40. ^ a b Adams, John (November 30, 2012). "Paglia on Art". The New York Times. Retrieved July 7, 2014.
  41. ^ . Big Ideas. TVO. November 7, 2009. Archived from the original on May 24, 2012.
  42. ^ Rodden, John (2001). Performing the Literary Interview: How Writers Craft Their Public Selves. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press. p. 174. ISBN 0-8032-3939-4.
  43. ^ "Madonna". Vogue. 1998. p. 135.
  44. ^ Crawford, Leslie (June 5, 1999). "Kate Millett, the ambivalent feminist". Salon.
  45. ^ Paglia, Camille (April 29, 1997). . Salon.com. San Francisco, CA: Salon Media Group. Archived from the original on December 30, 2008.
  46. ^ Paglia, Camille (October 14, 1974). "Men and their Discontents". Salon.com. San Francisco, CA: Salon Media Group. Archived from the original on April 27, 2010. Retrieved January 16, 2009.
  47. ^ Paglia, Camille (December 6, 2000). . Salon.com. San Francisco, CA: Salon Media Group. Archived from the original on February 6, 2009. Retrieved June 28, 2012.
  48. ^ Boynton, Robert (November 21, 1999). "Who Needs Philosophy?". The New York Times. New York City. Retrieved December 12, 2015.
  49. ^ . Salon.com. San Francisco, CA: Salon Media Group. February 24, 1999. Archived from the original on June 25, 2009. Retrieved July 2, 2009.
  50. ^ Sommers, Christina Hoff (1995), Who Stole Feminism? How Women Have Betrayed Women, New York: Simon & Schuster
  51. ^ Loptson, Peter (1998). Readings on human nature. Peterborough, Canada: Broadview Press. p. 490. ISBN 1-55111-156-X.
  52. ^ Wolf, Naomi (March 16, 1992). "Feminist Fatale". The New Republic. pp. 23–25.
  53. ^ Paglia, Camille (April 13, 1992). "Wolf Pack". The New Republic. pp. 4–5.
  54. ^ Wolf, Naomi; Paglia, Camille (May 18, 1992). "The Last Words". The New Republic. pp. 4–5.
  55. ^ Viner, Katharine (August 31, 2001). "Stitched up". The Guardian. London.
  56. ^ Paglia (September 19, 1991), Gifts of Speech (lecture), Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT
  57. ^ Fields, Suzanne (May 14, 1992). "New enemies list for some of you feminists". Reading Eagle.
  58. ^ Blinkhorn, Lois (December 6, 1992). "Ideas flying, a maverick breaks the feminist mold". The Milwaukee Journal.[permanent dead link]
  59. ^ Pollitt, Katha (November 1997). "Feminism's Unfinished Business". The Atlantic. Retrieved May 25, 2008.
  60. ^ Thornhill, Randy; Palmer, Craig T (2000), A Natural History of Rape: Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion, Cambridge, Massachusetts: MIT Press, p. 183
  61. ^ Paglia, Camille (October 12, 2015). "Camille Paglia Takes on Taylor Swift, Hollywood's #GirlSquad Culture". The Hollywood Reporter.
  62. ^ a b c d e Last, Jonathan V. (June 15, 2017). . The Weekly Standard. New York City. Archived from the original on October 19, 2020. Retrieved June 15, 2017.
  63. ^ Varadarajan, Tunku (August 30, 2019). "Opinion | A Feminist Capitalist Professor Under Fire". Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved July 31, 2021.
  64. ^ "University of the Arts rejects calls to fire Camille Paglia". www.insidehighered.com. April 17, 2019. Retrieved August 3, 2021.
  65. ^ Paglia, Camille (June 11, 2007). "Real inconvenient truths". Salon.com. San Francisco, California: Salon Media Group. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
  66. ^ a b Baird, Julia (April 8, 2005). "Hark, a libertarian looks to her right". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  67. ^ Paglia, Camille (April 11, 2007). "Real inconvenient truths". Salon.
  68. ^ Cusset, François (2008), French Theory: How Foucault, Derrida, Deleuze & Co. Transformed the Intellectual Life of the United States, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, pp. XVIII, 37, ISBN 978-0816647323
  69. ^ Paglia 1992, p. 243.
  70. ^ Paglia 1994, p. 232.
  71. ^ , Salon, p. 2, July 22, 1997, archived from the original on April 11, 2008
  72. ^ Pagila, Camille (April 23, 2014). "The Drinking Age Is Past Its Prime". Time.
  73. ^ Postrel, Virginia (August–September 1995). "Interview with the Vamp". Reason.
  74. ^ a b Killough, George (December 20, 1992). "Paglia attacks political correctness". Reading Eagle. Reading, PA: William S. Flippin.
  75. ^ "Is Camille Paglia a Cultural Conservative?". Conversations with Tyler – via YouTube.[dead YouTube link]
  76. ^ a b . Reason. Washington DC: Reason Foundation. November 2004. Archived from the original on October 29, 2008. Retrieved October 27, 2008.
  77. ^ Paglia, Camille (April 20, 2008). . The Daily Telegraph. London, England. Archived from the original on May 16, 2008. Retrieved April 28, 2010.
  78. ^ Lauerman, Kerry (October 10, 2012). "In "Glittering" return, Paglia lets loose". Salon. San Francisco, CA: Salon Media Group.
  79. ^ Gillespie, Nick; Krainin, Todd (March 19, 2015). "Everything's Awesome and Camille Paglia Is Unhappy!". Reason. Washington DC: Reason Foundation. Retrieved May 20, 2015.
  80. ^ Paglia, Camille (March 25, 2016). "Camille Paglia: This is why Trump's winning, and why I won't vote for Hillary". Salon. Retrieved May 15, 2016.
  81. ^ "Which Hollywood Stars are Voting for Third-Party Candidates?". The Hollywood Reporter. Los Angeles, CA: Eldridge Industries. November 8, 2016. Retrieved November 11, 2016.
  82. ^ a b Paglia, Camille (December 5, 2018). "Camille Paglia: 'Hillary wants Trump to win again'". The Spectator. Retrieved May 5, 2021.
  83. ^ Paglia, Camille (March 1, 2014). . The Telegraph. Archived from the original on March 6, 2014.
  84. ^ a b . Salon. San Francisco, CA: Salon Media Group. April 15, 1997. Archived from the original on May 10, 2000. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  85. ^ a b Paglia 1994, pp. 90–91.
  86. ^ Paglia, Camille (August 1995). . The Guide. Montréal, Canada: Bill Andriette. Archived from the original on July 11, 2011. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  87. ^ "The Bête Noire of Feminism: Camille Paglia". Time. New York City: Time. January 13, 1992. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  88. ^ Paglia, Camille (September 19, 1991). "Crisis In The American Universities". Gift of Speech. Sweet Briar, VA: Sweet Briar College. Retrieved September 7, 2019.
  89. ^ Paglia, Camille (April 22, 2018). "Camille Paglia — Free Women, Free Men". Radio New Zealand. Wellington, NZ. 44 min 29 s. Retrieved August 22, 2020.
  90. ^ a b Romano, Karen (December 9, 1990). "Camille Paglia's 'Sexual Personae' provokes amusement, outrage". The News. Boca Raton, Florida: Knight-Ridder.[permanent dead link]
  91. ^ Teachout, Terry (July 22, 1990). "Siding With the Men". The New York Times. New York City. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
  92. ^ See the following:
  93. ^ Burgess, Anthony (April 27, 1990). "Creatures of decadent light and violent darkness: Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson". The Independent. London, England: Independent Print Ltd. p. 19.
  94. ^ "Paperback Best Sellers". The New York Times. January 10, 1993.
  95. ^ Steiner, Wendy (November 20, 1994). "Advertisements for Themselves". The New York Times. New York City. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
  96. ^ Kakutani, Michiko (November 15, 1994). "The Rise of a Self-Proclaimed Phenomenon". The New York Times. New York City. Retrieved October 4, 2018.
  97. ^ McCombe, John P. (2009). "The Birds and Hitchcock's Hyper-Romantic Vision". In Deutelbaum, Marshall; Poague, Leland A. (eds.). A Hitchcock Reader. Hoboken, New Jersey: John Wiley & Sons. p. 266. ISBN 978-1405155571.
  98. ^ McCombe p.267
  99. ^ a b c d James, Clive (March 27, 2005). "Well Versed". The New York Times.
  100. ^ Book description on Random House website.
  101. ^ Rosen, Gary (October 16, 2012). "The Pagan Aesthetic". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved February 7, 2014.
  102. ^ "Free Women, Free Men". Retrieved March 15, 2017.
  103. ^ Garner, Dwight (March 23, 2017). "From Camille Paglia, 'Free Women, Free Men' and No Sacred Cows". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 30, 2017.
  104. ^ Paglia, Camille (2018). Provocations: collected essays. ISBN 978-1-5247-4689-6. OCLC 1019883092.

Sources Edit

External links Edit

  •   Quotations related to Camille Paglia at Wikiquote
  •   Media related to Camille Paglia at Wikimedia Commons
  • Salon Articles by Camille Paglia
  • Appearances on C-SPAN
    • In Depth interview with Paglia, August 3, 2003
  • Camille Paglia at IMDb

camille, paglia, camille, anna, paglia, ɑː, born, april, 1947, american, academic, social, critic, defines, herself, feminist, paglia, been, professor, university, arts, philadelphia, pennsylvania, since, 1984, critical, many, aspects, modern, culture, author,. Camille Anna Paglia ˈ p ɑː l i e born April 2 1947 is an American academic and social critic who defines herself as a feminist Paglia has been a professor at the University of the Arts in Philadelphia Pennsylvania since 1984 1 She is critical of many aspects of modern culture 2 3 and is the author of Sexual Personae Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson 1990 and other books She is also a critic of contemporary American feminism and of post structuralism as well as a commentator on multiple aspects of American culture such as its visual art music and film history Camille PagliaPaglia in 2017BornCamille Anna Paglia 1947 04 02 April 2 1947 age 76 Endicott New York U S OccupationProfessor cultural criticEducationBinghamton University BA Yale University MA PhD SubjectsPopular culture art poetry sex film feminism politicsLiterary movementIndividualist feminism Contents 1 Personal life 2 Education 3 Career 4 Views 4 1 Feminism 4 2 Transgender people 4 3 Climate change 4 4 French academia 4 5 Politics 4 6 Child sexuality 5 Books 5 1 Sexual Personae 5 2 Sex Art and American Culture 5 3 Vamps and Tramps 5 4 The Birds 5 5 Break Blow Burn 5 6 Glittering Images 5 7 Free Women Free Men 5 8 Provocations 6 Works 7 References 7 1 Sources 8 External linksPersonal life EditPaglia was born in Endicott New York the eldest child 4 of Pasquale and Lydia Anne nee Colapietro Paglia All four of her grandparents were born in Italy Her mother immigrated to the United States at five years old from Ceccano in the province of Frosinone Lazio Italy 2 5 Paglia has stated that her father s side of the family was from the Campanian towns of Avellino Benevento and Caserta 6 Paglia was raised Roman Catholic 7 and attended primary school in rural Oxford New York where her family lived in a working farmhouse 8 Her father a veteran of World War II 9 taught at the Oxford Academy high school and exposed his young daughter to art through books he brought home about French art history In 1957 her family moved to Syracuse New York so that her father could begin graduate school he eventually became a professor of Romance languages at Le Moyne College 10 She attended the Edward Smith Elementary School T Aaron Levy Junior High and Nottingham Senior High School 11 In 1992 Carmelia Metosh her Latin teacher for three years said She always has been controversial Whatever statements were being made in class she had to challenge them She made good points then as she does now 12 Paglia thanked Metosh in the acknowledgements to Sexual Personae later describing her as the dragon lady of Latin studies who breathed fire at principals and school boards 11 During her stays at a summer Girl Scout 13 camp in Thendara New York she took on a variety of new names including Anastasia her confirmation name inspired by the film Anastasia Stacy and Stanley 14 A crucially significant event for her was when an outhouse exploded after she poured too much quicklime into the latrine That symbolized everything I would do with my life and work Excess and extravagance and explosiveness I would be someone who would look into the latrine of culture into pornography and crime and psychopathology and I would drop the bomb into it 15 16 For more than a decade Paglia was the partner of artist Alison Maddex 17 18 Paglia legally adopted Maddex s son who was born in 2002 19 In 2007 the couple separated 20 but remained harmonious co parents in the words of Paglia who lived two miles three kilometers apart 4 Paglia is an atheist and has stated she has a very spiritual mystic view of the universe 21 Education EditPaglia entered Harpur College at Binghamton University in 1964 22 The same year Paglia s poem Atrophy was published in the local newspaper 23 She later said that she was trained to read literature by poet Milton Kessler who believed in the responsiveness of the body and of the activation of the senses to literature And oh did I believe in that 24 She graduated from Harpur as class valedictorian in 1968 10 According to Paglia while in college she punched a marauding drunk 16 and takes pride in having been put on probation for committing 39 pranks 11 Paglia attended Yale as a graduate student and she claims to have been the only open lesbian at Yale Graduate School from 1968 to 1972 16 25 At Yale Paglia quarreled with Rita Mae Brown whom she later characterized as then darkly nihilist and argued with the New Haven Connecticut Women s Liberation Rock Band when they dismissed the Rolling Stones as sexist 26 Paglia was mentored by Harold Bloom 22 Sexual Personae was then titled The Androgynous Dream the image of the androgyne as it appears in literature and is embodied in the psyche of the artist with reference to the visual arts and the cinema 27 Paglia read Susan Sontag and aspired to emulate what she called her celebrity her positioning in the media world at the border of the high arts and popular culture Paglia first saw Sontag in person on October 15 1969 Vietnam Moratorium Day when Paglia then a Yale graduate student was visiting a friend at Princeton In 1973 Paglia a militant feminist and open lesbian was working at her first academic job at Bennington College She considered Sontag a radical who had challenged male dominance The same year Paglia drove to an appearance by Sontag at Dartmouth hoping to arrange for her to speak at Bennington but found it difficult to find the money for Sontag s speaking fee Paglia relied on help from Richard Tristman a friend of Sontag s to persuade her to come Bennington College agreed to pay Sontag 700 twice what they usually offered speakers but only half Sontag s usual fee to give a talk about contemporary issues Paglia staged a poster campaign urging students to attend Sontag s appearance Sontag arrived at Bennington Carriage Barn where she was to speak more than an hour late and then began reading what Paglia recalled as a boring and bleak short story about nothing in the style of a French New Novel 28 As a result of Sontag s Bennington College appearance Paglia began to become disenchanted with her believing that she had withdrawn from confrontation with the academic world and that her mandarin disdain for popular culture showed an elitism that betrayed her early work which had suggested that high and low culture both reflected a new sensibility 28 Career EditIn the autumn of 1972 Paglia began teaching at Bennington College which hired her in part thanks to a recommendation from Harold Bloom 29 At Bennington she befriended the philosopher James Fessenden who first taught there in the same semester 30 Through her study of the classics and the scholarly work of Jane Ellen Harrison James George Frazer Erich Neumann and others Paglia developed a theory of sexual history that contradicted a number of ideas fashionable at the time hence her criticism of Marija Gimbutas Carolyn Heilbrun Kate Millett and others She laid out her ideas on matriarchy androgyny homosexuality sadomasochism and other topics in her Yale PhD thesis Sexual Personae The Androgyne in Literature and Art which she defended in December 1974 In September 1976 she gave a public lecture drawing on that dissertation 31 in which she discussed Edmund Spenser s The Faerie Queene followed by remarks on Diana Ross Gracie Allen Yul Brynner and Stephane Audran 32 Paglia wrote that she nearly came to blows with the founding members of the women s studies program at the State University of New York at Albany when they categorically denied that hormones influence human experience or behavior 33 Similar fights with feminists and academics culminated in a 1978 incident further explanation needed which led her to resign from Bennington after a lengthy standoff with the administration Paglia accepted a settlement from the college and resigned in 1979 29 Paglia finished Sexual Personae in the early 1980s but could not get it published She supported herself with visiting and part time teaching jobs at Yale Wesleyan and other Connecticut colleges Her paper The Apollonian Androgyne and the Faerie Queene was published in English Literary Renaissance Winter 1979 and her dissertation was cited by J Hillis Miller in his April 1980 article Wuthering Heights and the Ellipses of Interpretation in Journal of Religion in Literature but her academic career was otherwise stalled In a 1995 letter to Boyd Holmes she recalled I earned a little extra money by doing some local features reporting for a New Haven alternative newspaper The Advocate in the early 1980s She wrote articles on New Haven s historic pizzerias and on an old house that was a stop on the Underground Railroad 34 In 1984 she joined the faculty of the Philadelphia College of Performing Arts which merged in 1987 with the Philadelphia College of Art to become the University of the Arts Paglia is on the editorial board of the classics and humanities journal Arion 35 She wrote a regular column for Salon com from 1995 to 2001 and again from 2007 to 2009 Paglia resumed writing a Salon com column in 2016 36 Paglia cooperated with Carl Rollyson and Lisa Paddock in their writing of Susan Sontag The Making of an Icon sending them detailed letters from which they quoted with her permission Rollyson and Paddock note that Sontag had her lawyer put our publisher on notice when she realized that they were investigating her life and career 28 Paglia participates in the decennial poll of film professionals conducted by Sight amp Sound which asks participants to submit a list of what they believe to be the ten greatest films of all time According to her responses to the poll in 2002 2012 and 2022 the films Paglia holds in highest regard include Ben Hur Blowup Citizen Kane La Dolce Vita The Godfather The Godfather Part II Gone with the Wind Lawrence of Arabia North by Northwest Orphee Persona 2001 A Space Odyssey The Ten Commandments and Vertigo 37 38 39 In 2005 Paglia was named as one of the top 100 public intellectuals by the journals Foreign Policy and Prospect 19 In 2012 an article in The New York Times remarked that a nyone who has been following the body count of the culture wars over the past decades knows Paglia 40 Paglia has said that she is willing to have her entire career judged on the basis of her composition of what she considers to be probably the most important sentence that she has ever written God is man s greatest idea 41 Views EditFeminism Edit Though Paglia admires Simone de Beauvoir and The Second Sex the supreme work of modern feminism its deep learning and massive argument are unsurpassed as well as Germaine Greer 22 Time critic Martha Duffy writes that Paglia does not hesitate to hurl brazen insults at several feminists In an interview Paglia stated that to be effective one has to name names criticism should be concrete Paglia stated that many critics escape into abstractions rendering their criticism intellectualized and tame 42 Paglia was known as one of the scholars and feminists that theorized American singer Madonna within feminism and for which publications such as Vogue called her the high priestess of post feminism 43 Paglia accused Greer of becoming a drone in three years as a result of her early success Paglia has also criticized the work of activist Diana Fuss 10 Elaine Showalter calls Paglia unique in the hyperbole and virulence of her hostility to virtually all the prominent feminist activists public figures writers and scholars of her generation mentioning Carolyn Heilbrun Judith Butler Carol Gilligan Marilyn French Zoe Baird Kimba Wood Susan Thomases and Hillary Clinton as targets of her criticism 22 Paglia has accused Kate Millett of starting the repressive Stalinist style in feminist criticism 44 Paglia has repeatedly criticized Patricia Ireland former president of the National Organization for Women NOW calling her a sanctimonious unappealing role model for women 45 whose smug arrogant attitude is accompanied by painfully limited processes of thought 46 Paglia contends that under Ireland s leadership NOW damaged and marginalized the women s movement 47 In 1999 Martha Nussbaum wrote an essay called The Professor of Parody in which she criticized Judith Butler for retreating to abstract theory disconnected from real world problems 48 Paglia reacted to the essay by stating that the criticism was long overdue but characterized the criticism as one PC diva turning against another She criticized Nussbaum for failing to make her criticisms earlier while accusing her of borrowing Paglia s ideas without acknowledgement She called Nussbaum s preparation or instinct for sex analysis dubious at best but nevertheless stated that Nussbaum is a genuine scholar who operates on a vastly higher intellectual level than Butler 49 Many feminists have criticized Paglia Christina Hoff Sommers calls her Perhaps the most conspicuous target of feminist opprobrium noting that the Women s Review of Books described Sexual Personae as patriarchy s counter assault on feminism Sommers relates that when Paglia appeared at a Brown University forum feminists signed a petition censuring her and demanding an investigation into procedures for inviting speakers to the campus 50 Some feminist critics have characterized Paglia as an anti feminist feminist critical of central features of much contemporary feminism but holding out her own special variety of feminist affirmation 51 Naomi Wolf traded a series of sometimes personal attacks with Paglia throughout the early 1990s In The New Republic Wolf wrote that Paglia poses as a sexual renegade but is in fact the most dutiful of patriarchal daughters and characterized Paglia as intellectually dishonest 52 53 54 55 In a 1991 speech Paglia criticized Wolf for blaming anorexia on the media calling Wolf a twit 56 Gloria Steinem said of Paglia that Her calling herself a feminist is sort of like a Nazi saying they re not anti Semitic 57 Paglia called Steinem the Stalin of feminism 58 Katha Pollitt calls Paglia one of a seemingly endless parade of social critics who have achieved celebrity by portraying not sexism but feminism as the problem Pollitt writes that Paglia has glorified male dominance and has been able to get away with things that might make even Rush Limbaugh blanch because she is a woman 59 Paglia s view that rape is sexually motivated has been endorsed by evolutionary psychologists Randy Thornhill and Craig T Palmer they comment that Paglia urges women to be skeptical toward the feminist party line on the subject to become better informed about risk factors and to use the information to lower their risk of rape 60 In an essay critiquing the Hollywood celebrity fad of Girl Squads made popular in 2015 by pop icons like Taylor Swift Paglia argued that rather than empowering women the cliquish practice actually harms the self esteem of those who are not rich famous or attractive enough to belong to the group while further defining women only by a very narrow often sexualized stereotype She challenged that to be truly empowering these groups need to mentor advise and be more inclusive for more women to realize their true individual potential 61 Transgender people Edit Though she has not transitioned Paglia identifies as transgender 62 She reports having gender dysphoria since childhood and says that never once in my life have I felt female 63 She says that she was donning flamboyant male costumes from early childhood on 62 Nevertheless Paglia says that she is highly skeptical about the current transgender wave which she thinks has been produced by far more complicated psychological and sociological factors than current gender discourse allows She writes that In a democracy everyone no matter how nonconformist or eccentric should be free from harassment and abuse But at the same time no one deserves special rights protections or privileges on the basis of their eccentricity 62 Paglia s views led to a petition demanding that the University of the Arts remove her from their faculty but the university rejected it Paglia considered it a publicity stunt and praised the university s eloquent statement affirming academic freedom as a landmark in contemporary education 64 Climate change Edit See also Climate change denial Paglia has long rejected the scientific consensus on global warming which she describes as the political agenda that has slowly accrued around the issue of climate change 65 In a 2017 interview with The Weekly Standard Paglia stated It is certainly ironic how liberals who posture as defenders of science when it comes to global warming a sentimental myth unsupported by evidence flee all reference to biology when it comes to gender 62 French academia Edit Paglia is critical of the influence many postwar French writers have had on the humanities claiming that universities are in the thrall of French post structuralists 66 that in the works of Jean Baudrillard Jacques Derrida Jacques Lacan and Michel Foucault she never once found a sentence that interested her 67 Francois Cusset writes that Paglia like other major American public intellectuals after World War II owes her broader recognition mainly to the political repercussions of polemics that first erupted on college campuses in her case to a polemic against foreign intellectualism He says she achieved phenomenal success when she called Foucault a bastard thereby providing together with Alan Sokal s Social Text parody the best evidence for Paul de Man s view that theory should be defined negatively based on the opposition it arouses 68 However Paglia s assessment of French writers is not purely negative She has called Simone de Beauvoir s The Second Sex 1949 brilliant and imperious and she traces the lineage of her dissident feminism not from Betty Friedan but from Beauvoir Paglia also identified Jean Paul Sartre s work as part of a high period in literature She has praised Roland Barthes s Mythologies 1957 and Gilles Deleuze s Masochism Coldness and Cruelty 1967 while finding both men s later work flawed Of Gaston Bachelard who influenced Paglia she wrote his dignified yet fluid phenomenological descriptive method seemed to me ideal for art adding that he was the last modern French writer I took seriously 69 70 71 Politics Edit Paglia characterizes herself as a libertarian 66 72 She opposes laws against prostitution pornography drugs and abortion She is also opposed to affirmative action laws 73 74 Some of her views have been characterized as conservative although when asked in 2017 if she considers herself a cultural conservative she replied No not at all Conservative would mean I was cleaving to something past which was great and no longer is and usually I m not saying we should return to anything I do believe we re moving inexorably into the future 10 75 Paglia criticized Bill Clinton for not resigning after the Monica Lewinsky scandal which she says paralyzed the government for two years leading directly to our blindsiding by 9 11 76 In the 2000 U S presidential campaign she voted for the Green Party candidate Ralph Nader because I detest the arrogant corrupt superstructure of the Democratic Party with which I remain stubbornly registered 76 In the 2004 U S presidential election Paglia supported John Kerry and in 2008 she supported Barack Obama 77 In 2012 she supported Green Party candidate Jill Stein 78 Paglia was highly critical of 2016 presidential candidate Hillary Clinton calling her a fraud and a liar 79 Paglia refused to support either Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump in the 2016 U S presidential election indicating in a March Salon column that if Hillary Clinton won the Democratic Party s nomination she would either cast a write in vote for Bernie Sanders or else vote for Green Party candidate Stein as she did in 2012 80 Paglia later clarified in a statement that she would vote for Stein 81 In 2017 she stated that she is a registered Democrat who voted for Bernie Sanders in the 2016 Democratic primary and for Jill Stein in the 2016 general election 62 For the 2020 U S presidential election Paglia criticized the Democratic Party for lacking a coherent message and a strong candidate She disavowed Sanders as being way too old and creaky and retracted her initial support for Kamala Harris for missing a huge opportunity to play a moderating statesmanlike role 82 Citing the need to project steadiness substance and warmth Paglia expressed interest in Cheri Bustos and Steve Bullock as potential candidates 82 Child sexuality Edit In accordance with a highly politicised view of child abuse Paglia notably commented in an interview in 1992 In the case of Sinead O Connor child abuse was justified This was her response to the singer s action on Saturday Night Live where she tore up a picture of the pope in protest of the unfolding child sexual abuse scandal surrounding the Catholic Church 1 In 1993 Paglia signed a manifesto supporting NAMBLA a pederasty and pedophilia advocacy organization 83 84 In 1994 Paglia supported lowering the legal age of consent to 14 She noted in a 1995 interview with pro pedophile activist Bill Andriette I fail to see what is wrong with erotic fondling with any age 85 86 In a 1997 Salon column Paglia expressed the view that male pedophilia correlates with the heights of a civilization stating I have repeatedly protested the lynch mob hysteria that dogs the issue of man boy love In Sexual Personae I argued that male pedophilia is intricately intertwined with the cardinal moments of Western civilization 84 Paglia noted in several interviews as well as Sexual Personae that she supports the legalization of certain forms of child pornography 87 88 85 She later changed her views on the matter In an interview for Radio New Zealand s Saturday Morning show conducted on April 28 2018 by Kim Hill Paglia was asked Are you a libertarian on the issue of pedophilia to which she replied In terms of the present day I think it s absolutely impossible to think we could reproduce the Athenian code of pedophilia of boy love that was central to culture at that time We must protect children and I feel that very very strongly The age of consent for sexual interactions between a boy and an older man is obviously disputed at what point that should be I used to think that fourteen the way it is in some places in the world was adequate I no longer think that I think young people need greater protection than that This is one of those areas that we must confine to the realm of imagination and the history of the arts 89 Books EditSexual Personae Edit Main article Sexual Personae Paglia s Sexual Personae was rejected by at least seven different publishers before it was published by Yale University Press whereupon it became a best seller reaching seventh place on the paperback best seller list a rare accomplishment for a scholarly book 10 Paglia called it her prison book commenting I felt like Cervantes Genet It took all the resources of being Catholic to cut myself off and sit in my cell 22 Sexual Personae has been called an energetic Freud friendly reading of Western art one that seemed heretical and perverse at the height of political correctness according to Daniel Nester its characterization of William Blake as the British Marquis de Sade or Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson as self ruling hermaphrodites who cannot mate still pricks up many an English major s ears 24 In the book Paglia argues that human nature has an inherently dangerous Dionysian or chthonic aspect especially in regard to sexuality 90 Culture and civilization are created by men and represent an attempt to contain that force 90 Women are powerful too but as natural forces and both marriage and religion are means to contain chaotic forces 10 A best seller it was described by Terry Teachout in a New York Times book review as being both intellectually stimulating and exasperating 91 Sexual Personae received critical reviews from numerous feminist scholars 92 Anthony Burgess described Sexual Personae as a fine disturbing book that seeks to attack the reader s emotions as well as his or her prejudices 93 Sex Art and American Culture Edit External video nbsp Presentation by Paglia on Sex Art and American Culture October 26 1994 C SPANSex Art and American Culture Essays 1992 is a collection of short pieces many published previously as editorials or reviews and some transcripts of interviews 74 The essays cover such subjects as Madonna Elizabeth Taylor rock music Robert Mapplethorpe the Clarence Thomas Supreme Court nomination rape Marlon Brando drag Milton Kessler and academia It made The New York Times bestseller list for paperbacks 94 Vamps and Tramps Edit Vamps and Tramps New Essays 1994 is a collection of 42 short articles and a long essay No Law in the Arena a Pagan Theory of Sexuality It also contains a collection of cartoons from newspapers about Paglia Writing for The New York Times Wendy Steiner wrote Comic camp outspoken Ms Paglia throws an absurdist shoe into the ponderous wheels of academia 95 Michiko Kakutani also writing for The New York Times wrote Her writings on education are highly persuasive just as some of her essays on the perils of regulating pornography and the puritanical excesses of the women s movement radiate a fierce common sense Unfortunately Ms Paglia has a way of undermining her more interesting arguments with flip hyperbolic declarations 96 The Birds Edit In 1998 in commemoration of the 35th anniversary of the release of Alfred Hitchcock s film The Birds the British Film Institute commissioned Paglia to write a book about the film The book interprets the film as in the main line of British Romanticism descending from the raw nature tableaux and sinister femme fatales of Coleridge 97 Paglia uses a psychoanalytic framework to interpret the film as portraying a release of primitive forces of sex and appetite that have been subdued but never fully tamed 98 Break Blow Burn Edit Break Blow Burn Camille Paglia Reads Forty three of the World s Best Poems 2005 is a collection of 43 short selections of verse with an accompanying essay by Paglia 99 The collection is oriented primarily to those unfamiliar with the works 99 Clive James wrote that Paglia tends to focus on American works as it moves from Shakespeare forward through time with Yeats following Coleridge as the last European discussed 99 but emphasized her range of sympathy and her ability to juxtapose and unite distinct art forms in her analysis 99 Glittering Images Edit Main article Glittering Images Glittering Images A Journey Through Art from Egypt to Star Wars 2012 is a series of essays about notable works of art from ancient to modern times published in October 2012 100 Writer John Adams of The New York Times Book Review was skeptical of the book accusing it of being so agenda driven and so riddled with polemic asides that its potential to persuade is forever being compromised 40 Gary Rosen of The Wall Street Journal however praised the book s impressive range and accessibility to readers 101 Free Women Free Men Edit External video nbsp Presentation by Paglia on Free Women Free Men March 20 2017 C SPANPaglia s Free Women Free Men Sex Gender and Feminism was published by Pantheon in 2017 102 It is a series of essays from 1990 onward Dwight Garner in The New York Times wrote Paglia s essays address two main targets modern feminism which Paglia writes has become a catchall vegetable drawer where bunches of clingy sob sisters can store their moldy neuroses and modern American universities of which she asks How is it possible that today s academic left has supported rather than protested campus speech codes as well as the grotesque surveillance and overregulation of student life 103 Provocations Edit Paglia s fourth essay collection Provocations Collected Essays on Art Feminism Politics Sex and Education was published by Pantheon on October 9 2018 104 Works EditThe Androgyne in Literature and Art 1974 PhD thesis Sexual Personae Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson 1990 ISBN 0 679 73579 8 Sex Art and American Culture Essays 1992 ISBN 0 679 74101 1 Vamps and Tramps New Essays 1994 ISBN 0 679 75120 3 The Birds BFI Film Classics 1998 ISBN 0 851 70651 7 Break Blow Burn Camille Paglia Reads Forty three of the World s Best Poems 2005 ISBN 0 375 42084 3 Glittering Images A Journey Through Art from Egypt to Star Wars 2012 ISBN 978 0 375 42460 1 Free Women Free Men Sex Gender and Feminism 2017 ISBN 978 0 375424779 Provocations Collected Essays 2018 ISBN 978 1 52474689 6References Edit Camille Paglia Staff U arts a b Birnbaum Robert August 3 2005 Birnbaum v Camille Paglia interview The Morning News Handler Richard May 23 2009 An atheist s defence of religion The paradox of Camille Paglia the cultural gunslinger CBC News a b Patterson Christina August 25 2012 Camille Paglia I don t get along with lesbians at all They don t like me and I don t like them The Independent Retrieved May 30 2017 You tube Google permanent dead link Paglia 1994 p 61 Varadaraja Tunku August 30 2019 A Feminist Capitalist Professor Under Fire The Wall Street Journal Archived from the original on December 30 2019 Arcadia Financial Times p 22 March 15 1997 Pasquale J Paglia Syracuse Herald Tribune obit January 23 1991 a b c d e f Duffy Martha January 13 1992 The Bete Noire of Feminism Camille Paglia Time Archived from the original on November 6 2012 a b c Paglia Camille January 26 2000 My Education The Scotsman McKeever James Jim November 22 1992 Hurricane Camille Syracuse Herald American Syracuse NY A Short History of the Beaverkill Valley Friends of Beaverkill Community Retrieved March 31 2019 Paglia 1994 p 428 29 Lavin Cheryl December 8 1994 Camille Paglia Chicago Tribune Retrieved January 18 2017 a b c Steiner Wendy November 20 1994 Advertisements for Themselves The New York Times Hamilton William L March 11 1999 In a New Museum a Blue Period The New York Times Archived from the original on January 30 2013 Lauerman Kerry April 7 2005 Camille Paglia Warrior for the word Salon Archived from the original on January 23 2011 Retrieved October 9 2010 a b Wente Margaret October 18 2007 Camille Paglia Hillary Clinton can t win and shouldn t The Globe amp Mail Toronto Camille Paglia Gay Activists Childish for Demanding Rights Towleroad June 25 2009 Retrieved June 28 2012 Camille Paglia discusses Free Women Free Men Sex Gender Feminism PDF Seattle Public Library Retrieved June 12 2022 a b c d e Showalter Elaine 2002 Inventing Herself Claiming a Feminist Intellectual Heritage London Picador Atrophy The Post Standard Syracuse New York April 12 1964 a b Nester Daniel April 2005 An interview with Camille Paglia bookslut com Bookslut Archived from the original on May 10 2012 Retrieved June 28 2012 Savage Dan October 4 1992 Interview The Stranger Letter to the Editor Camille Paglia Chronicle of Higher Education June 17 1998 Paglia Camille A February 13 1972 To Professor Carolyn Heilbrun letter Austin Texas Knopf Archive Humanities Research Center a b c Rollyson Carl Paddock Lisa 2000 Susan Sontag The Making of an Icon New York WW Norton amp Co a b Findlay Heather September 2000 Interview Girlfriends magazine Paglia 1994 p 202 Lecture by Camille Paglia Bennington Banner September 20 1976 Interview November 2002 Paglia Camille June 17 1998 Letter to the Editor Chronicle of Higher Education Paglia Camille February 1995 To Boyd Holmes letter About Arion Boston University Archived from the original on July 8 2012 Retrieved June 28 2012 Paglia Camille February 12 2016 Sexism has nothing to do with it Camille Paglia on Hillary Clinton Gloria Steinem and why New Hampshire women broke for Bernie Sanders Salon How the directors and critics voted Camille Paglia UK Sight amp Sound via BFI 2002 archived from the original on June 25 2012 Camille Paglia UK Sight amp Sound via BFI 2012 archived from the original on August 19 2012 Camille Paglia BFI a b Adams John November 30 2012 Paglia on Art The New York Times Retrieved July 7 2014 Camille Paglia Big Ideas TVO November 7 2009 Archived from the original on May 24 2012 Rodden John 2001 Performing the Literary Interview How Writers Craft Their Public Selves Lincoln University of Nebraska Press p 174 ISBN 0 8032 3939 4 Madonna Vogue 1998 p 135 Crawford Leslie June 5 1999 Kate Millett the ambivalent feminist Salon Paglia Camille April 29 1997 Why I Go for Women with Big Beaks Salon com San Francisco CA Salon Media Group Archived from the original on December 30 2008 Paglia Camille October 14 1974 Men and their Discontents Salon com San Francisco CA Salon Media Group Archived from the original on April 27 2010 Retrieved January 16 2009 Paglia Camille December 6 2000 The Peevish Porcupine Beats the Shrill Rooster Salon com San Francisco CA Salon Media Group Archived from the original on February 6 2009 Retrieved June 28 2012 Boynton Robert November 21 1999 Who Needs Philosophy The New York Times New York City Retrieved December 12 2015 Butler vs Nussbaum Salon com San Francisco CA Salon Media Group February 24 1999 Archived from the original on June 25 2009 Retrieved July 2 2009 Sommers Christina Hoff 1995 Who Stole Feminism How Women Have Betrayed Women New York Simon amp Schuster Loptson Peter 1998 Readings on human nature Peterborough Canada Broadview Press p 490 ISBN 1 55111 156 X Wolf Naomi March 16 1992 Feminist Fatale The New Republic pp 23 25 Paglia Camille April 13 1992 Wolf Pack The New Republic pp 4 5 Wolf Naomi Paglia Camille May 18 1992 The Last Words The New Republic pp 4 5 Viner Katharine August 31 2001 Stitched up The Guardian London Paglia September 19 1991 Gifts of Speech lecture Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Fields Suzanne May 14 1992 New enemies list for some of you feminists Reading Eagle Blinkhorn Lois December 6 1992 Ideas flying a maverick breaks the feminist mold The Milwaukee Journal permanent dead link Pollitt Katha November 1997 Feminism s Unfinished Business The Atlantic Retrieved May 25 2008 Thornhill Randy Palmer Craig T 2000 A Natural History of Rape Biological Bases of Sexual Coercion Cambridge Massachusetts MIT Press p 183 Paglia Camille October 12 2015 Camille Paglia Takes on Taylor Swift Hollywood s GirlSquad Culture The Hollywood Reporter a b c d e Last Jonathan V June 15 2017 Camille Paglia On Trump Democrats Transgenderism and Islamist Terror The Weekly Standard New York City Archived from the original on October 19 2020 Retrieved June 15 2017 Varadarajan Tunku August 30 2019 Opinion A Feminist Capitalist Professor Under Fire Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved July 31 2021 University of the Arts rejects calls to fire Camille Paglia www insidehighered com April 17 2019 Retrieved August 3 2021 Paglia Camille June 11 2007 Real inconvenient truths Salon com San Francisco California Salon Media Group Retrieved October 4 2018 a b Baird Julia April 8 2005 Hark a libertarian looks to her right The Sydney Morning Herald Paglia Camille April 11 2007 Real inconvenient truths Salon Cusset Francois 2008 French Theory How Foucault Derrida Deleuze amp Co Transformed the Intellectual Life of the United States Minneapolis University of Minnesota Press pp XVIII 37 ISBN 978 0816647323 Paglia 1992 p 243 Paglia 1994 p 232 Of Versace and killer prom queens Salon p 2 July 22 1997 archived from the original on April 11 2008 Pagila Camille April 23 2014 The Drinking Age Is Past Its Prime Time Postrel Virginia August September 1995 Interview with the Vamp Reason a b Killough George December 20 1992 Paglia attacks political correctness Reading Eagle Reading PA William S Flippin Is Camille Paglia a Cultural Conservative Conversations with Tyler via YouTube dead YouTube link a b Who s Getting Your Vote Reason Washington DC Reason Foundation November 2004 Archived from the original on October 29 2008 Retrieved October 27 2008 Paglia Camille April 20 2008 Why Women Shouldn t Vote for Hillary Clinton The Daily Telegraph London England Archived from the original on May 16 2008 Retrieved April 28 2010 Lauerman Kerry October 10 2012 In Glittering return Paglia lets loose Salon San Francisco CA Salon Media Group Gillespie Nick Krainin Todd March 19 2015 Everything s Awesome and Camille Paglia Is Unhappy Reason Washington DC Reason Foundation Retrieved May 20 2015 Paglia Camille March 25 2016 Camille Paglia This is why Trump s winning and why I won t vote for Hillary Salon Retrieved May 15 2016 Which Hollywood Stars are Voting for Third Party Candidates The Hollywood Reporter Los Angeles CA Eldridge Industries November 8 2016 Retrieved November 11 2016 a b Paglia Camille December 5 2018 Camille Paglia Hillary wants Trump to win again The Spectator Retrieved May 5 2021 Paglia Camille March 1 2014 The Drinking Age Is Past Its Prime The Telegraph Archived from the original on March 6 2014 a b Camille Paglia s online advice for the culturally disgruntled Salon San Francisco CA Salon Media Group April 15 1997 Archived from the original on May 10 2000 Retrieved September 7 2019 a b Paglia 1994 pp 90 91 Paglia Camille August 1995 Has the gay movement turned down the wrong path The Guide Montreal Canada Bill Andriette Archived from the original on July 11 2011 Retrieved September 7 2019 The Bete Noire of Feminism Camille Paglia Time New York City Time January 13 1992 Retrieved September 7 2019 Paglia Camille September 19 1991 Crisis In The American Universities Gift of Speech Sweet Briar VA Sweet Briar College Retrieved September 7 2019 Paglia Camille April 22 2018 Camille Paglia Free Women Free Men Radio New Zealand Wellington NZ 44 min 29 s Retrieved August 22 2020 a b Romano Karen December 9 1990 Camille Paglia s Sexual Personae provokes amusement outrage The News Boca Raton Florida Knight Ridder permanent dead link Teachout Terry July 22 1990 Siding With the Men The New York Times New York City Retrieved October 4 2018 See the following Gilbert Sandra M Winter 1992 Review Freaked Out Camille Paglia s Sexual Personae The Kenyon Review Gambier Ohio Kenyon College 14 1 158 164 JSTOR 4336635 Lofreda Beth 1992 Of Stallions and Sycophants Camille Paglia s Sexual Personae Social Text Durham North Carolina Duke University Press 30 30 121 124 doi 10 2307 466472 JSTOR 466472 Kasraie Mary Rose November 1993 Book Reviews Sexual Personae Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson by Camille Paglia South Atlantic Review Atlanta Georgia South Atlantic Modern Language Association 58 4 132 135 doi 10 2307 3201015 JSTOR 3201015 Booth Alison Winter 1999 The Mother of All Cultures Camille Paglia and Feminist Mythologies The Kenyon Review Gambier Ohio Kenyon College 21 1 27 45 JSTOR 4337811 Sheets Robin Ann October 1991 Book Reviews Sexual Personae Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson by Camille Paglia Journal of the History of Sexuality University of Texas Press 2 2 205 298 JSTOR 3704039 Ebert Teresa L October 1991 Review The Politics of the Outrageous The Women s Review of Books Wellesley Centers for Women 9 1 12 13 doi 10 2307 4021115 JSTOR 4021115 Noble Marianne 2000 Notes to Chapter 5 note 1 In Noble Marianne ed The masochistic pleasures of sentimental literature Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 225 226 ISBN 9780691009377 Simons Judy August 1994 Book Reviews Sexual Personae Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson by Camille Paglia The Review of English Studies Oxford University Press 45 179 451 452 doi 10 1093 res XLV 179 451 JSTOR 518881 Burgess Anthony April 27 1990 Creatures of decadent light and violent darkness Sexual Personae Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson The Independent London England Independent Print Ltd p 19 Paperback Best Sellers The New York Times January 10 1993 Steiner Wendy November 20 1994 Advertisements for Themselves The New York Times New York City Retrieved October 4 2018 Kakutani Michiko November 15 1994 The Rise of a Self Proclaimed Phenomenon The New York Times New York City Retrieved October 4 2018 McCombe John P 2009 The Birds and Hitchcock s Hyper Romantic Vision In Deutelbaum Marshall Poague Leland A eds A Hitchcock Reader Hoboken New Jersey John Wiley amp Sons p 266 ISBN 978 1405155571 McCombe p 267 a b c d James Clive March 27 2005 Well Versed The New York Times Book description on Random House website Rosen Gary October 16 2012 The Pagan Aesthetic The Wall Street Journal Retrieved February 7 2014 Free Women Free Men Retrieved March 15 2017 Garner Dwight March 23 2017 From Camille Paglia Free Women Free Men and No Sacred Cows The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 30 2017 Paglia Camille 2018 Provocations collected essays ISBN 978 1 5247 4689 6 OCLC 1019883092 Sources Edit Paglia Camille 1992 Sex Art and American Culture Essays ISBN 0 679 74101 1 1994 Vamps and Tramps New Essays New York Vintage Books ISBN 978 0 67975120 5External links Edit nbsp United States portal nbsp Biography portal nbsp Feminism portal nbsp Quotations related to Camille Paglia at Wikiquote nbsp Media related to Camille Paglia at Wikimedia Commons Salon Articles by Camille Paglia Appearances on C SPAN In Depth interview with Paglia August 3 2003 Camille Paglia at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Camille Paglia amp oldid 1176300362, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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