Potent, thought-provoking ruminations on feminism as a political movement capable of eradicating the subordination of women.
Responding primarily to situations in the U.S. and the U.K., Srinivasan, a professor of social and political theory at Oxford, presents a series of essays with titles like “Coda: The Politics of Desire,” “On Not Sleeping With Your Students,” and the titular “The Right to Sex,” a version of which first appeared in the London Review of Books. “There is no right to sex,” writes the author early on. “To think otherwise is to think like a rapist.” In “The Conspiracy Against Men,” she continues, “there is no general conspiracy against men. But there is a conspiracy against certain classes of men.” This collection contains a staggering amount of research; the notes and bibliography sections span nearly 100 pages, and each essay contains citations from numerous scholars and writers: Ida B. Wells, Kimberlé Crenshaw, Angela Davis, Ellen Willis, Andrea Long Chu, Audre Lorde, Catharine A. MacKinnon, and dozens more. Srinivasan addresses pornography, delineating its role in anti- and pro-sex feminist debates as well as sharing her experience of asking her undergraduate students if porn bears “responsibility for the objectification of women, for the marginalisation of women, for sexual violence against women.” (Their emphatic answer is yes.) The author twice quotes Robin Morgan’s declaration that “pornography is the theory, and rape the practice.” Of the unilateral injunction to believe women (“a blunt tool”), Srinivasan argues that "when factors other than gender—race, class, religion, immigration, status, sexuality—come into play, it is far from clear to whom we owe a gesture of epistemic solidarity.” Throughout, Srinivasan considers significant, pressing questions: “Can a working-class movement afford not to be anti-racist?” “Where does morality end and moralising begin?” “Whom, exactly…did the sexual revolution set free?”
Featuring excellent criticism of subjects such as carceral solutions and sex education, this is a vital, compelling collection.