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View Poll Results: Your verdict on the MW monument | |||
Take it down now |
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3 | 60.00% |
Not great, but OK by me |
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2 | 40.00% |
Looks nice to me |
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0 | 0% |
A worthy monument to MW |
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0 | 0% |
Voters: 5. You may not vote on this poll |
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#1 (permalink) | ||
...here to hear...
Join Date: Nov 2010
Location: He lives on Love Street
Posts: 4,444
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Quite literally, *googles pareidolia*: that's an impressive word to have at your disposal!
One reason we've disscussed the MW statue at such length is that it seems to embody or lead into a bunch of intriguing-for-some questions:- The history of feminism. Do female nudes celebrate women, or send a message that they are vulnerable/available? How do we represent the past? To what extent should public art, like statues, educate, shock or entertain us? But as Elph indicates, a lot has been said about just one statue, which is why I'm grateful that Neapolitan noticed the other half of my thread title: Statues of Women, and showed us a couple of others :- Quote:
__________________________________________________ _______________ 150 years after Mary W, in the 1920s, Margaret Sanger was promoting birth control as a road to freedom and equality for women in the USA and became the founder of the controvertial Planned Parenthood organisation - so controvertial that: Quote:
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"Am I enjoying this moment? I know of it and perhaps that is enough." - Sybille Bedford, 1953 Last edited by Lisnaholic; 11-14-2020 at 07:06 AM. |
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