<p><strong>ANDREA DWORKIN</strong></p><p></p><p>Of this study of her work Andrea Dworkin wrote:</p><p>It's amazing for me to see my work treated with such passion and respect. There is nothing resembling it in the U.S. in relation to my work.</p><p>Michael Moorcock wrote of American feminist and writer Andrea Dworkin: 'I think feminism is the most important political movement of our times. People think Andrea's a man-hater. She gets called a Fascist and a Nazi - particularly by the American left but it's not detectable in her work. To me she seemed like a pussycat... She has an extraordinary eloquence a kind of magic that moves people'.</p><p>Dworkin is a very positive writer always driving onwards for revolution change and radical thinking. In the introduction to Letters From a War Zone she writes: 'I am more reckless now than when I started out because I know what everything costs and it doesn't matter. I have paid a lot to write what I believe to be true. On one level I suffer terribly from the disdain that much of my work has met. On another deeper level I don't give a fuck'.</p><p>Dworkin's life's work balances the individual suffering of the writer with the larger worldwide suffering of women's subordination so that she says one becomes on a personal level immune to pain while on the larger global level the pain of women and children around the world continues to grow and continues to make her madder and madder: 'I wrote them [essays and speeches] because I believe in writing in its power to right wrongs to change how people see and think to change how and what people know to change how and why people act. I wrote them out of the conviction Quaker in origin that one must speak truth to power. This is the basic premise in my work as a feminist: activism or writing'. Here Dworkin posits her work as a crusade that's the newspaper term for her kind of polemic a 'crusade' against silence and violence against cruelty and inequality and certainly Dworkin is often portrayed in the media as a crusader someone who really believes in herself in her convictions someone wholly committed as few others are to a radical change. Michael Moorcock in his piece on Andrea Dworkin (New Statesman 1988) writes: [w]hat she fights against in everything she writes and does is male refusal to acknowledge sexual inequality male hatred of women male contempt for women male power'.</p>
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