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The Female Man
The Female Man
Author: Joanna Russ
Joanna's world is recognizable--very like our own. Jeanine's world is much the same--except Hitler never took power, WWII never happened, and the Great Depression continues. Janet's world is something else again. In her world wars are fought, children are born, countries are governed and wilderness conquered ... and she is the only kind of man...  more »
ISBN: 273194
Publication Date: 2/1973
Pages: 218
Rating:
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Publisher: Bantam Bookis
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 0
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Readnmachine avatar reviewed The Female Man on + 1439 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Russ's non-linear style gets in the way of, rather than enhances, this time-travel fantasy/morality tale. Her observations on gender roles, societal mores, and sexuality are blurred and blunted as the reader spends too much time trying to figure out who "I" is, that identity shifting and flowing from one narrator to another, often within the same paragraph. This may have been cutting-edge hot stuff in 1975; now it seems curiously dated and affected.
althea avatar reviewed The Female Man on + 774 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This book won a Nebula Award, and is considered to be a classic of feminist science fiction.

I remembered that long ago I had read a short story collection by Russ (Extra(ordinary) People) and really disliked it. I also read her novel We who Are About To and was seriously unimpressed. But I didn't think I'd read The Female Man, so I was willing to give it a go due to its classic status and all... Reading it, I realized that I had actually started reading it long ago - but I think I QUIT part way through, because only the beginning was familiar. That is so unusual for me - I hardly EVER quit reading a book. But it was so bad.

Seriously, stuff like this is why I don't call myself a feminist - I just don't want to be associated. It wasn't empowering, it was stereotyped and cliched, and DEPRESSING - not depressing because of women's place in the world, depressing because the author comes through as a sad, lonely, bitter, nasty person, full of resentment and hate for EVERYONE. I consider myself to be a strong, independent woman who at least tries to love life and embrace happiness and, according to this type of woman, thats not feminist.

And on top of that, it wasn't even well-written. Its scattered, awkward, without any coherent plot. Its just badly thought-out more like random thoughts and polemical jottings than an actual novel. (I guess one would call this a postmodern style, if one wanted to dignify it.)

There are four main characters (although one doesnt show up till most of the way through the book). They are from different worlds, and theres some vague mention of travelling between worlds, which I suppose is the justification for it being called sci-fi, but its really more of a metaphorical device, so that the different types of women can interact.

Joanna - is obviously the author. In the book, she comes across as unhappy, and without much notable personality.

Jeannine - is a cliché of a weak woman oppressed by Man. She lives in a world where the Depression never ended, and is the worst stereotype of a librarian. (As a librarian, this offends me). She has a fiance that shes not attracted to, (she doesnt seem to like sex at all) but she feels the need to Be With A Man and Get Married due to personal loneliness and social pressure.

Jael - is from a future world where women are at war with men. She is the cliché of the woman who acts like a Man because she thinks that is what one needs to do to get ahead. She likes sex and has a cloned, nearly-brainless male sex toy.

Janet - comes from Whileaway, an all-female world (men died in a plague 900 years ago). This seems to be Russ idea of a utopia sort of. Its AWFUL! Its also kind of weird. The women of Whileaway are kinda stocky, have big butts, and wear pajamas all the time. (no makeup, of course!) Theyre really smart and technologically advanced. They live in group families, but travel separately all the time and dont form long-lasting intimate bonds, usually. They have sex, but its a stress-free, unromantic kind of sex. (There is a funny scene describing a dildo when a young woman from our world finds one on Janets bed ok, thats the best part of the book). They work very few hours, but because they are intelligent and therefore not suited to work (?!) they think they work all the time. Theyre always changing jobs and being sent to different places, without any say-so. The death penalty is in effect for those who try to avoid these duties. Theres no overarching government and no wars, but the society, which is the same planetwide, seems just as oppressive as any government, and fatal duels are frequent and accepted. Children live at home till 5, then are sent to crèches, then leave to begin independent life at 12. All these peoples lives seem to be completely devoid of fun.

From this, I take away that: Joanna Russ probably likes big butts. ;-) (Oh, she also definitely likes smoking but doesnt like drinking) She has serious problems forming deep relationships with lovers or children (she really doesnt seem to UNDERSTAND intimate relationships at all), and she secretly(?) wishes for an incredibly homogenous, organized society where everyone has an exactly equal place, without any need to put effort into developing your own identity and having to create that place for yourself. Because life is hard, shes decided that the Reason is MEN. When she fails to find common ground with other women, she says thats because those women have been subverted by MEN and MALE-DOMINATED SOCIETY.

I disagree strongly. I dont think that, fundamentally, women are any different than men. I dont think that a woman-only society would be war-free or homogenous. Moreover, I dont WANT that homogenous kind of society on any level! I would rather go through the trauma of finding myself than have an identity basically handed to me. I dont think that the reason that people have problems in relationships or problems with loneliness is because we have two genders I think its inherent to humanity. People can have ALL KINDS of disagreements that have nothing to do with gender. All men are not the same. All women are not the same. Yes, life can sometimes be really hard. It can be lonely. But really, the problem isnt sexism. Im not saying that sexism doesnt exist, or that it doesnt need to be addressed but the real problems of sexism are not addressed here at all.

I guess a surprising part of this book to me was the hatred of other women. (I expected the man-hating.) But there is just so much vitriol here directed toward women. Its like Russ is so unhappy that she deeply resents any woman who seems happy with her life. She sees them as lying or brainwashed as Jeannines or Jaels. She feels that individual success (or empowerment) and what society considers to be femininity are mutually incompatible. Its actually a bit enlightening, to see this perspective but I just wanted to yell, No! Youre just WRONG! You dont understand PEOPLE! at so many points during this book.

At one point in the book, Russ throws in a page or two of excerpts of criticism of her work. I had to laugh, because I totally agreed with about 70% of it - Part 7, Section III: "maunderings of antiquated feminism...this shapeless book...some truth buried in a largely hysterical...of very limited interest. I should ... another tract for the trash-can...burned her bra and thought that . . . no characterization, no plot...really important issues are neglected while...another shrill polemic which the...this pretense at a novel...trying to shock... the usual boring obligatory references to Lesbianism [and statutory rape no less!]... drivel." (I dont have the book on me, so I copied that from a web page there were more accurate bits in that section, I thought, but you get the idea.)

Oh, the other funny thing is that in at least two places in the book she praises Kate Millett. I met Millett. She used to live on the Bowery, and she'd occasionally stop by CBGB Gallery. She came by one time during my club night, and started talking to me at the door. She seemed almost unwilling to believe that the night was 'mine,' (how could a woman be in charge?) and then started yelling (well, practically) at me because the music that was playing wasn't a woman. I tried telling her (which was true) that although the singer was male, the bass player in the band was a woman, but that didn't seem to count, somehow. She was just going on about how I should support women. (Oh, and she was definitely bona fide CRAZY).
Readnmachine avatar reviewed The Female Man on + 1439 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This was very much a breakthrough book when it was first published in 1975.

First, it was written by a woman writer, using her real (and recognizably female) name; second there's nary a rocket ship in sight; third, it deals with feminism at its 70s-era angriest; and fourth, it tosses most narrative traditions right out the window.

Obviously, it's not everyone's cup of tea. Some of it is dated. Some of it remains insightful and bitterly funny. And some of it attempts to shock with its frank sexuality -- and in these days of just-about-anything-goes, that may be where it shows its age the most.

The story, such as it is, wanders between three characters (and an occasional ephemeral, unnamed fourth) -- Jeannine, whose Earth never emerged from the Great Depression but which also never underwent WWII; Joanna, whose world is very much like our own; and Janet, whose world is not only vastly different than ours, but is also several millennia ahead of "our" timeline. There's a slight nod to the notion of diverging realities, in which each action splits off an entirely new future and which therefore allows the story to sneak in under the edges of the science fiction tent -- a tent which had been considerably enlarged in the preceding decade.

There is a vague plotline of sorts that emerges almost at the end of the novel, without which the entire book would be but a thin veneer over a feminist polemic pointing out how repressed, exploited, and psychologically abused women were at the hands of those beastly males.

At this remove, the novel verges on becoming an historical oddity -- angry and literate but flawed by its over-reliance on style over substance.
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reviewed The Female Man on + 5 more book reviews
I found this book hard to read - the structure and flow was not in a style I enjoy.
reviewed The Female Man on + 292 more book reviews
A wonderful book. An early book on feminism that should be read today. If only for giggles but definitely for the concepts. Joalice.


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