"Letters from theater" includes conflicts between men and women who prohibit pornography. In this article there are many personal strong opinions about the atrocities of pornography and erotic women. For this reason, men and women have been in war for many years. Pornography agrees to prohibit pornography as there is a possibility that men would make men who do not respect women. This article makes me angry. Because it shows that another part of life is not really recognized. This seems to be real for me, as many women in life become vulnerable if they are sexually active at a young age.
Andrea Dworkin presented a series of lectures and short articles as writers and activists in a letter from the war zone in her career. Many of her articles include censorship and pornography. Because pornography is not an idea but an act, censorship has nothing to do with it. In writing a book in 1981, Dworkin wrote: "Men have women," erotic: "Pornography says women are hurt, forced, and wanted to be abused. Disability - In gender related literature women are humiliated, humiliated, and porn say that women deny, yes - they say yes, affirmation to violence, affirmation to pain "(Dworkin, p .203)
With nonfiction books (theater letter) and her first novels (ice and fire), Dworkin established a reputation as a provocative writer of feminist literature. She gave her name to the hero / narrator of this powerful, nearly crazy and undeniable autobiographical novel. And it records her life and sexual sacrifice. When she was harassed at a movie theater, "Andria" tasted sex for the first time at the age of 9. As a rebellious teenager she wanders around Greenwich Village, worships Alan Ginsburg and is involved in the peace movement. Not a penis, not a street but a wise man on the street, Andrea was a lover, an acquaintance, a stranger, ruthless and raped. The popular essay of the novel - Andrea, fierce, embarrassing, enthusiastic - subtly captures the spiritual and physical deterioration of the narrator. It is no doubt that Andrea has become a commitment to women's movement as this novel is over. Initial printing 25,000, writer's journey