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An Unprotected Woman
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16389 |
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BOOK WORLD
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5 / 1989 |
5,233 Words |
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Antonio de Nicolas Antonia de Nicolas is the author of Habits of Mind,
Remembering the God to Come, Avatara, and other works. He
teaches philosophy at SUNY at Stony Brook, N.Y. |
SOR JUANA
Octavio Paz, translated by Margaret Sayers Peden
Harvard University Press, 1988
547 pp., $29.95
A SOR JUANA ANTHOLOGY
Translated by Alan S. Trueblood, Foreword by Octavio Paz
Harvard University Press, 1988
248 pp., $29.50
Some in the women's liberation movement would have us believe that systematic discrimination against women can be corrected by raising women in the image of men. In the wake of this goal, a linguistic orthodoxy has developed.
What this and all other liberation movements miss is that discrimination, persecution, exploitation, war occur when our selfish instincts are channeled to fuel and serve a larger and deeper passion we humans share, particularly when we appear as a group, and this passion is the passion for orthodoxy. Orthodoxy aligns the most disparate individuals into a conspiracy to destroy anyone who does not conform to its dictates. The history of Western culture is the history of orthodoxy, a succession of orthodoxies.
Orthodoxy operates in someone else's name; it is a mask and, under its protection, even the weakest among us become daring, passionate heroes. It makes little difference if such orthodoxy appears in the name of religion, psychotherapy, science, humanism, progress, the church or the state. Orthodoxy separates the
... (1991 of 29981 Characters)
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