Camille Anna Paglia (/ˈpɑːliə/; born April 2,
1947) is an
American academic and social critic.
Paglia, a self-described dissident feminist, has been a professor at the
University of the Arts in
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, since
1984.
The New York Times has described her as "first and foremost an educator".
She is the author of
Sexual Personae:
Art and
Decadence from
Nefertiti to
Emily Dickinson (
1990) and a collection of essays,
Sex, Art, and American Culture (
1992). Her other books and essays include an analysis of
Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds, and
Break,
Blow,
Burn (
2005) on poetry. Her most recent book is
2012's
Glittering Images. She is a critic of
American feminism and of post-structuralist theory as well as a commentator on multiple aspects of
U.S. social culture such as its visual art, music, and film history.
Paglia is known for her critical views of many aspects of modern culture, including feminism and liberalism.[
4][5] She has been characterized variously as a "contrarian academic" and a feminist "bête noire,"[
6][7] a "witty controversialist,"[8] and a maverick,[9]
Margaret Wente has called Paglia "a writer in a category of her own
... a feminist who hates affirmative action; an atheist who respects religion" and "a
Democrat who thinks her party doesn't get it."[10]
Martha Duffy writes that Paglia "advocates a core curriculum based mostly on the classics" and rails against "chic
French theorists
Michel Foucault and
Jacques Lacan," and "has a strong libertarian streak — on subjects like pornography — that go straight to her '60s coming-of-age."[6]
Elaine Showalter has called Paglia a "radical libertarian," noting her socially liberal stands on abortion, sodomy, prostitution, drug use, and suicide. Paglia has denounced feminist academics and women's studies, celebrated popular culture and
Madonna, and become a media celebrity, writing op-eds and gossip columns, appearing on television and telling her story to journalists.[11]
Paglia has said that she is willing to have her entire career judged on the basis of her composition of what she considers to be "probably the most important sentence that she has ever written": "God is man's greatest idea."[12]
Paglia's Sexual Personae was rejected by no fewer than seven different publishers (not unusual, in and of itself), but when finally published by
Yale University Press, became a best seller, reaching seventh place on the paperback best-seller list, a rare accomplishment for a scholarly book.[6] 'Paglia called it her "prison book", commenting, "I felt like
Cervantes,
Genet. It took all the resources of being
Catholic to cut myself off and sit in my cell."[11] Sexual Personae has been called an "energetic, Freud-friendly reading of
Western art", one that seemed "heretical and perverse", at the height of political correctness; according to
Daniel Nester, its characterization of "
William Blake as the
British Marquis de Sade or
Walt Whitman and Emily Dickinson as 'self-ruling hermaphrodites who cannot mate' still pricks up many an
English major’s ears".[13]
Paglia is a devotee of
Oscar Wilde and
Walter Pater, cherishing "performance, artifice and play rather than earnestness." She has expressed admiration for
Dorothy Parker and
Mary McCarthy, as well as for models, singers and movie stars such as
Elizabeth Taylor, Madonna, and
Barbra Streisand.[11]
In 2005, Paglia was named as one of the top
100 public intellectuals by the journals
Foreign Policy and
Prospect.[14] In 2012, an article in The New York Times remarked that "[a]nyone who has been following the body count of the culture wars over the past decades knows Paglia".
- published: 09 Feb 2015
- views: 25230