TV Schedule

Germaine Greer furious at play based on her life by 'insane reactionary'


  1. LindseyIndigo
  2. related topics
Feminist academic Germaine Greer has branded the writer of a comic play reportedly based on aspects of her life an "insane reactionary" who "holds feminism in contempt".

Her wrath was provoked by Joanna Murray-Smith's The Female of the Species, which pokes fun at militant feminism and questions whether ideological extremes stand up to the rigours of real life.

Ms Greer, who became a household name in the 1970s with the publication of her groundbreaking book The Female Eunuch, described The Female of the Species as "threadbare" and was said to have declined an invitation to its first night, and returned a copy of the script unread.

Although the characters are fictional, the play kicks off with an incident similar to one experienced by Ms Greer in 2000, when Karen Burke, a 19-year-old Bath University student obsessed with Ms Greer's work, broke into her house in Saffron Walden, Essex, tied her up and held her captive for an hour. Ms Greer was released after friends arriving at the house for dinner called the police after hearing shouting. Ms Burke later received two years' probation after admitting a charge of harassment.

In the play, a student called Molly holds hostage a feminist writer called Margot Mason. "Men aren't our problem – old feminists are," says Molly.

Ms Murray-Smith said her play was not a "character portrait" of Ms Greer, but the academic countered: "Why do the production team and the writer keep on referring to me, Germaine Greer, if they say it is not Greer they're writing about?" She told The Sunday Times: "Murray-Smith is an insane reactionary who boasts that she has not read a single feminist text. She holds feminism in contempt."

Ms Murray-Smith said: "I'm sorry she has formed that opinion of me without having met me or read my work. It would take a braver woman than me to write about Greer directly. However, my Margot does have many of Greer's characteristics. Both are charismatic, outrageous and irritating."

The Molly character was created to explore "what happens to the fans who find that the intellectuals they admire then renege on their one-time beliefs", she said, adding: "Despite what Greer says, I am a feminist."

Does a play or a film have to actually name a person for it to be clear that the central character is based on them? If your life is on public display, do you have the right to complain when people explore it, even in fiction? Is that the problem for feminism today - that old and modern feminists just can't agree, so end up getting nowhere? And can the hip young things responding to this possibly bear to discuss feminism without mentioning hairy lesbians, ugly bitter women or social outcasts...?
LindseyIndigo

4 responses // Germaine Greer furious at play based on her life by 'insane reactionary'

  • Feminism is an offshoot of the Women's Liberation Movement, a movement funded mainly by the Rockefeller Trust. This movement was put in place so the other half of the majority (that being women) could also be forced to pay taxes...

    Do your research, women, you were enslaved years ago, and you don't even know it...
    TyMarshal
  • The play sounds pretty stupid, to be honest, but if it succeeds in creating a dialogue between 'older' and 'younger' feminists, then it has some kind of purpose.

    And by the way: I love the picture!
    JanaPokana
  • Feminism is the belief that men and women deserve equal rights and respect.

    Why does that strike fear in weak men and women.

    Work fo Equal Rights and Justice for All.
    TouchArt
  • Here's a better picture of Germaine Greer.

    _
    Photo copyright by www.TommyGakenwan.com
    "Germaine Greer is a heroine of mine: being able to photograph her at the Edinburgh Book Festival was a privilege for me and, more importantly, great fun.

    This one's not pin sharp, but that doesn't bother me: I love the pose and expression."
    _________________

    from TouchArt.net and OneEarthBlog.blogspot.com
    TouchArt

Add your response

Login/Registration is required to add a response.