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Louise Allen Responds to Bindel

Louise Allen’s book, Virgin Slave, Barbarian King, was one cited by Julie Bindel as part of the patriarchal propaganda designed to “feed directly into some women’s sense of themselves as lesser beings, as creatures desperate to be dominated.” Ms. Allen’s response was on the Guardian today.

I wish Allen had talked more about the historical aspect of the novel and less about the idea of feminism as owning the right to have whatever fantasy a woman wishes.

Via Michelle Styles.

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JaneJane is a long time romance reader whose passion is, you guessed it, reading. She's currently loving contemporary authors like Sarah Mayberry and Kristan Higgins but her first love will always be the historical. Some of her old time favorites are Amanda Quick and Johanna Lindsey and some of the new favorites are Sherry Thomas, Joanna Bourne and Claudia Dain. Email this author | All posts by Jane

4 comments to “Louise Allen Responds to Bindel”

  1. 1

    With 550 available words, and a request to include enough of Bindel’s arguements to help anyone coming new to the discussion, there wasn’t much space to develop the historical aspects. It was a fascinating period to research with the Barbarians coming out as considerably more “civilised” by modern standards than the Romans – treatment of slaves, women’s voice in society, the strength of the family unit for example. And it is from the Visigoths and other Barbarian tribes that we get the modern nation state and much of our legal framework. It was fun dealing with the culture clash between the hero/heroine and also managing the problems of working within the historical facts of the months following the Sack of Rome in AD410
    Louise

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  2. 2

    In the comments section, underneath Louise’s article, I’ve had fun doing a bit of analysis of an excerpt of the novel which I found on Amazon.

    Bindel really shouldn’t have picked this novel as an example of “patriarchal propaganda”, because it’s literally got the heroine questioning the behaviour of the pater familias.

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  3. 3

    I’ll be reading it. Both Jayne and I bought it during the Harlequin 50% off sale. Maybe it will be our January dueling review.

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  4. 4

    “Bindel really shouldn’t have picked this novel as an example of “patriarchal propaganda”, because it’s literally got the heroine questioning the behaviour of the pater familias.”

    True, Laura. I guess that’s what happens though when you rely on out of date research that was sloppy to start with and only read the back cover blurb of the book you are dissing. If any of my senior high school students had ever presented me with a piece of badly researched rubbish like that I would have failed her.

    From the sound of it Ms Allen’s research is of a far higher standard.
    Elizabeth

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