That was a prostitute? Who would pay to have sex with that woman??
Andrea Dworkin, who explored the subordination of women, believed that marriage laws “mandated intercourse.” She also targeted pornography.
Encouraged by her socially conscious father, Ms. Dworkin embraced dissent from an early age. She refused to sing Christmas carols in elementary school and by sixth grade decided she wanted to change restrictive abortion laws. She admired books by the Bronte sisters as well as Che Guevara.
As a college freshman, she was arrested at the United Nations for protesting the Vietnam War and taken to a women’s detention center. A humiliating body cavity search by male doctors followed. Her denunciations of her treatment helped shut down the facility.
Ms. Dworkin spent her career exploring what she considered the subordination of women, which she saw everywhere from marriage to pornography to conservative politics.
Using terms such as “gynocide” to describe a cultural holocaust against women, she was adored by some who found in her writings and lectures a refreshing rebelliousness, and decried by others, including novelist Anne Tyler, who found her tendency toward sweeping statements ludicrous.
Beginning with her book “Woman Hating” (1974), written when she was 27, Ms. Dworkin found her full, strident voice. Embracing a polemical style that sometimes overshadowed the content of her writing, she declared the book’s objective was “to destroy patriarchal power at its source, the family, [and] in its most hideous form, the national state.”