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The Marquis De Sades Attitude Towards Women

Statistics

  Counts

  Total Pages: 6.51
  Total Words: 1627
  Total Characters: 8402
  Number of Sentences: 111


  Averages

  Words per Sentences: 14.66
  Characters per Words: 5.16


  Readability

  Flesch Reading Ease: 60.25
  Fog Scale Level: 11.76
  Flesch-Kincaid Grade Level: 8.5  

The Marquis de Sade's Attitude Towards Women


     The Marquis de Sade was an author in France in the late 1700s.  His works
were infamous in their time, giving Sade a reputation as an adulterer, a
debaucher, and a sodomite. One of the more common misrepresentations
concerning Sade was his attitude toward women.  His attitude was shown in his
way of life and in two of his literary characters, Justine and Julliette.
     The Marquis de Sade was said to be the first and only philosopher of vice
because of his atheistic and sadistic activities.  He held the common woman in
low regard.  He believed that women dressed provocatively because they feared
men would take no notice of them if they were naked. He cared little for
forced sex.  Rape is not a crime, he explained, and is in fact less than
robbery, for you get what is used back after the deed is done (Bloch 108).
    Opinions about the Marquis de Sade's attitude towards sexual freedom for
women varies from author to author.  A prevalent one, the one held by Carter,
suggests Sade's work concerns sexual freedom and the nature of such,
significant because of his "refusal to see female sexuality in relation to a
reproductive function."
     Sade justified his beliefs through graffiti, playing psychologist on
vandals:

     In the stylization of graffiti, the prick is
     always presented erect, as an alert attitude.
     It points upward, asserts.  The hole is open, as
     an inert space, as a mouth, waiting to be filled.
     This iconography could be derived from the
     metaphysical sexual differences:  man aspires,
     woman serves no function but existence, waiting.

Between her thighs is zero, the symbol of nothingness, that only attains
somethingness when male principle fills it with meaning (Carter 4).
     The Marquis de Sade's way of thought is probably best symbolized in the
missionary position.  The missionary position represents the mythic
relationship between partners...

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