Thursday, August 01, 2019

"A World 'That Never Really Existed, but Feels Like a Memory'?"

"As to violence against women, what can I tell you? If you don't like it, don't go to a movie about the Manson killings. Say what you will about Charles Manson; he really empowered women to pursue excellence in traditionally male-dominated fields. From armed robbery to sadistic murder at knifepoint, he put women in positions from which they had been traditionally excluded, and ultimately helped them to break that hardest, highest glass ceiling, the one that makes death row such a male purview. The Manson crimes became famous because of the savagery of the killings, the killers became famous because so many of them were women, and the most famous of the victims was a very specific woman, so particularly feminine—and at the height of femininity, the peak of her young beauty, and eight-and-a-half months pregnant—that her slaughter instantly assumed a mythic importance."

Caitlin Flanagan at The Atlantic criticizes criticism of Quentin Tarantino's Once Upon a Time in Hollywood.

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