Feminized and Pretty 1


Book Description

A struggling young musician called Patrick meets Elizabeth Remington a much older wealthy business woman. After a whirlwind relationship they marry. Both had different reasons for the marriage and neither reason was love. Elizabeth chose him as the perfect malleable needy man to control, subjugate and feminise. Unfortunately for Patrick she hears him telling his best friend he only married Elizabeth as a get-rich-quick scheme and will take her for millions after a future divorce. Elizabeth believes this gives her full license to do whatever she wants to Patrick. No longer held back by any moral reasons, she begins Patrick's transformation in earnest with no limits to what she feels she can do to him.This story contains explicit scenes of a sexual nature including male to female gender transformation, female domination, CFNM and reluctant feminisation. All characters in this story are aged 18 and over. For adults aged 18 and over only




Feminized and Pretty 2


Book Description

In this second book of the series, Patrick's wife, the formidable Elizabeth Remington, decides to take his feminisation and humiliation to a higher level. She remains angry at his poor attempt to take her wealth. After Patrick's failed attempt to escape from his wife's clutches in book 1, he realises that feminisation has certain attractions after all. Elizabeth spots his comfort and acceptance and sets about putting him through a series of very public humiliations including being pegged and cuckolded. Patrick's acceptance of his feminisation is soon challenged by these humiliations and his wife's desire to make his feminisation more permanent.This 32,000 word novel contains erotic scenes of reluctant feminisation, sex, humiliation, CFNM and spanking. For adults aged 18 and over only.




Feminized and Pretty 3


Book Description

After being force feminized by his domineering wife Elisabeth in books 2 and 3, Patrick/Patricia didn't think his enforced femininity could be made even more extreme. How wrong he was. Patrick/Patricia begins this concluding book of the series after just having had an operation to give him enormous 42DD breasts. His work as a waitress, serving a mainly male clientele, becomes even more humiliating and Elisabeth forces him to work in low-cut tops and tiny micro skirts. Still his wife is not satisfied and wants to take him to even greater depths of humiliation and exaggerated femininity. However, one day while working as a waitress, he meets an enigmatic woman who takes an unusual interest in him. His transformation into femininity is about to become even more complicated.This 35,000 word novel contains explicit scenes of a sexual nature including forced male to female gender transformation, female domination, humiliation and CFNM. All characters in this story are aged 18 and over and is strictly for adults aged 18 and over.




The Cambridge World History of Sexualities: Volume 1, General Overviews


Book Description

Volume I offers historiographical surveys and general overviews of central topics in the history of world sexualities. Split across twenty-two chapters, this volume places the history of sexuality in dialogue with anthropology, women's history, LGBTQ+ history, queer theory, and public history, as well as examining the impact Freud and Foucault have had on the history of sexuality. The volume continues by providing overviews on the sexual body, family and marriage, the intersections of sexuality with race and class, male and female homoerotic relations, trans and gender variant sexuality, the sale of sex, sexual violence, sexual science, sexuality and emotion, erotic art and literature, and the material culture of sexuality.




New Feminized Majority


Book Description

Building beyond Lakoff's election-year best-seller, Don't Think of an Elephant, this new book shows how the values of American voters are dramatically shifting. With the arrival of the 2008 election year, a rising "feminized majority"-made up of both women and men-is emerging as the pivotal force in American politics. Emerging trends show these values are broadly progressive and address not just the needs of women but the general interests of society. They are held by women substantially more than by men but have become the values held by a majority of all voters, including millions of men. Like earlier eras in American history, such as the New Deal, the rise of the feminized majority today presents an opportunity for the Democrats to become the governing party for decades to come. Looking beyond the 2008 election, Adam and Derber describe a new political strategy that targets the feminized base and opens up a window for major social justice movements to make progressive change. Like Lakoff's, this striking new book-perfectly timed for election year 2008-offers a new vocabulary for every citizen who wants to understand (and reimagine) American politics. It will intrigue and provoke readers, stirring new conversation among progressives and new insights for every citizen interested in politics, morality, religion, values, and social justice.




Purple Passages


Book Description

At once passionate and dispassionate, Rachel Blau DuPlessis meticulously outlines key moments of choice and debate about masculinity among writers as disparate as Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot, Louis Zukofsky, Charles Olson, Robert Creeley, and Allen Ginsberg, choices that construct consequential models for institutions of poetic practice.




Gender and Jobs


Book Description

Sex in the world




Feminized, post-masculine men in Fight Club


Book Description

Essay from the year 2008 in the subject Film Science, grade: 1,0, Humboldt-University of Berlin (Anglistik / Amerikanistik), course: Postmodern Cinema, language: English, abstract: David Fincher’s movie Fight Club (1999)1 provoked a lot of debates because of its explicit depictions of violence, the representation of a mental disease, called Dissociative Identity Disorder (DID), and its questioning of today’s masculine role. The latter is a very interesting theme to which I will dedicate this essay. In the following, I will show and analyze the representation of the feminized, post-masculine men in Fight Club. Firstly, I will concern myself with the causes of this emasculation. Directionless and without any real-life role-models or strong father figure, without any wars or enemies, men in Fight Club are drawn to consumer society to find a new focus in their lives. But consumerism feminizes men’s bodies and pushes them more and more into a female sphere. Secondly, the effects of this feminization will be analyzed. Men want to re-masculinize their bodies and try to achieve this through a traditionally masculine way: violence. But even aggressive behaviour does not rescue them from their feminized self, as deriving pleasure from a fight involves both parts a sadistic, male and a masochistic, feminine one.




Poor Women in Rich Countries


Book Description

The first book to study women's poverty over the life course, this wide-ranging collection focuses on the economic condition of single mothers and single elderly women--while also considering partnered women and immigrants--in eight wealthy but diverse countries: Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States. In a rich analysis of labor market and social welfare sectors, Gertrude Schaffner Goldberg and a team of outstanding international contributors conclude that both living-wage employment and government provision of adequate benefits and services are necessary if lone women are to achieve a socially acceptable living standard. Taken together, the chapters extend a feminist critique of welfare state theories and chart nations' disparate progress against poverty -- probing, for instance, how Sweden emerged a leader in the prevention of women's poverty while the United States continues to lag. By identifying the social and economic policies that enable women to live independently, Poor Women in Rich Countries provides nothing less than a blueprint for abolishing women's poverty.




Images of Sainthood in Medieval Europe


Book Description

This handsomely illustrated book suggests new ways of understanding a cultural institution central to the spiritual and artistic imagination of the Middle Ages. Bringing together fourteen essays by contributors representing a number of disciplines, it illuminates issues including the place of sanctity in society, the role of gender in the representation of sainthood, and the use of hagiographic conventions in other genres.