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Awards
OverviewThe authoritative biography of the 60s countercultural icon who wroteSCUM Manifesto, shot Andy Warhol, and made an unforgettable mark on feminist history. , Solanas became one of the most famous women of her era. But she was also diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia and spent much of her life homeless or in mental hospitals. , a sui generis vision of radical gender dystopia, predicted ATMs, test-tube babies, the Internet, and artificial insemination long before they existed. It has sold more copies and been translated into more languages than nearly all other feminist texts of its time. And yet, shockingly little work has investigated the life of its author. This book is the first biography about Solanas, including original interviews with family, friends (and enemies), and numerous living Warhol associates. It reveals surprising details about Solanas's life: the children nearly no one knew she had, her drive for control over her own writing, and her elusive personal and professional relationships. ). Full Product DetailsAuthor: Breanne FahsPublisher: Feminist Press at The City University of New York Imprint: Feminist Press at The City University of New York Dimensions: Width: 14.00cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 20.30cm Weight: 0.370kg ISBN: 9781558618480ISBN 10: 1558618481 Pages: 382 Publication Date: 05 June 2014 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsValerie Solanas finally provides an in-depth, decade-spanning history of Valerie's life, including mid-teen pregnancies, anti-essentialist college newspaper rebuttals, SCUM lectures, Up Your Ass casting calls, transience, letters of grammatical corrections to Majority Report, a continual emphasis from various sources on Valerie's intelligence, radicalism, humor, comedic improve timing, and intensity, and thorough discussions of her work dismantling and repudiating sexuality, gender, morality, marriage, the money system, and the patriarchical status quo. --Natt Ann Carrera, singer/musician This compelling biography shows the complexity of Valerie Solanas, placing her in the context of so many later-twentieth-century cultural realities-the commodity explosion of the art world, nuclear family damage and dysfunction, emergent baby-boomer generation narcissism, and the complicated internal struggles of the feminist movement. --Catherine Morris, Sackler Family Curator at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art Valerie Solanas was an enigma, an outsider even among misfits, and one of the most shocking radicals in a decade teeming with them. Breanne Fah's book is a long overdue excavation of the obsessions, paranoia, and rage that fueled both Solanas's visionary manifesto and her appalling attempt to murder Warhol. --Cynthia Carr, author of Fire in the Belly: The Life and Times of David Wojnariowicz This is an astonishing book about an astonishing life. It is a stark epic of a woman who was a symbol in and of an era. Valerie Solanas tells us many of the brutal facts of Valerie's existence, both before she exploded onto the scene in New York in the mid to late 1960s, as well as afterward. She was larger than life: a genuinely heroic figure. What I appreciate most about Fahs's biography is that Valerie Solanas emerges with a dignity that escaped her in life. --Ti-Grace Atkinson, author of Amazon Odyssey Finally, There's no question that Solanas's belief in the necessaity of theorizing from the gutter would have her denouncing today's inclusive, increasingly professional landscape of feminism. But perhaps she can rest easier (if not in peace) knowing that Fahs has painted a sympathetic portrait of her uncompromising life that--for better and worse--wears its powerful ugliness on its sleeve. --LA Review of Books Solanas was a revolutionary artist, and the more time passes, the more significant and prescient her revolution appears to have been, which is in many ways all she ever cared about. How magnificently powerful, to maintain humor, insight, and self-confidence in the face of so much violence. A biography of Valerie Solanas then, hell yeah. You should go read her manifesto and then you should go read this. --The Brooklyn Rail Rather than focusing on the Warhol shooting, Fahs gives a refreshing degree of weight to not only SCUM Manifesto--and its contribution to the birth of radical feminism--but also to Solanas's earlier writings and creative pursuits, such as her playwriting and attempts at publishing in periodicals. Fahs, who interviewed her subject's family, friends, enemies, as well as Warhol associates, doesn't shy away from how hated and feared Solanas was by many feminists of the era, such as Betty Friedan, but she portrays Solanas as melancholy, warm, and emotionally broken, as well as violent and combative. While some characters pop up and drop away depending on their relevance to Solanas's life in the moment, giving a disjointed feel to the narrative, Fahs ably fills a notable gap in feminist history with this accessible volume. --Publishers Weekly Valerie Solanas is a biography of a compelling, charismatic, contemptible, and incorrigible woman. It is a biography of the effects of class in the United States on one woman's life. It is also the biography of an artist. Fahs ends with Solanas's own words from her 1977 corrected SCUM Manifesto 'The true artist is every self-confident, healthy female; and in a female society, the only Art, the only Culture, will be conceited, kookie, funkie females grooving on each other, cracking each other up, while cracking open the universe.' --Lambda Literary Review This is an astonishing book about an astonishing life. It is a stark epic of a woman who was a symbol in and of an era. Valerie Solanas tells us many of the brutal facts of Valerie's existence, both before she exploded onto the scene in New York in the mid to late 1960s, as well as afterward. She was larger than life: a genuinely heroic figure. What I appreciate most about Fahs's biography is that Valerie Solanas emerges with a dignity that escaped her in life. --Ti-Grace Atkinson, author of Amazon Odyssey Valerie Solanas was an enigma, an outsider even among misfits, and one of the most shocking radicals in a decade teeming with them. Breanne Fah's book is a long overdue excavation of the obsessions, paranoia, and rage that fueled both Solanas's visionary manifesto and her appalling attempt to murder Warhol. --Cynthia Carr, author of Fire in the Belly: The Life and Times of David Wojnariowicz Finally, a biography of Valerie Solanas that does justice to her brilliant SCUM Manifesto and tragic life. In this narrative, Andy Warhol no longer defines who Valerie was. Breanne Fahs has written a compelling masterpiece sure to become a classic. --Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of Outlaw Woman Breanne Fahs delivers the crucial backstory behind the deadly yet relevant aims of premier cultural deviant, Valerie Solanas, whose often indefensible edges, war cries, and logic of injury continue to haunt our era of desperate justice. --Avita Ronell, author of Crack Wars Valerie Solanas finally provides an in-depth, decade-spanning history of Valerie's life, including mid-teen pregnancies, anti-essentialist college newspaper rebuttals, SCUM lectures, Up Your Ass casting calls, transience, letters of grammatical corrections to Majority Report, a continual emphasis from various sources on Valerie's intelligence, radicalism, humor, comedic improve timing, and intensity, and thorough discussions of her work dismantling and repudiating sexuality, gender, morality, marriage, the money system, and the patriarchical status quo. --Natt Ann Carrera, musician This compelling biography shows the complexity of Valerie Solanas, placing her in the context of so many later-twentieth-century cultural realities-the commodity explosion of the art world, nuclear family damage and dysfunction, emergent baby-boomer generation narcissism, and the complicated internal struggles of the feminist movement. --Catherine Morris, Sackler Family Curator at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art There s no question that Solanas s belief in the necessaity of theorizing from the gutter would have her denouncing today s inclusive, increasingly professional landscape of feminism. But perhaps she can rest easier (if not in peace) knowing that Fahs has painted a sympathetic portrait of her uncompromising life thatfor better and worsewears its powerful ugliness on its sleeve. LA Review of Books Solanas was a revolutionary artist, and the more time passes, the more significant and prescient her revolution appears to have been, which is in many ways all she ever cared about. How magnificently powerful, to maintain humor, insight, and self-confidence in the face of so much violence. A biography of Valerie Solanas then, hell yeah. You should go read her manifesto and then you should go read this. The Brooklyn Rail Rather than focusing on the Warhol shooting, Fahs gives a refreshing degree of weight to not only SCUM Manifestoand its contribution to the birth of radical feminismbut also to Solanas s earlier writings and creative pursuits, such as her playwriting and attempts at publishing in periodicals. Fahs, who interviewed her subject s family, friends, enemies, as well as Warhol associates, doesn t shy away from how hated and feared Solanas was by many feminists of the era, such as Betty Friedan, but she portrays Solanas as melancholy, warm, and emotionally broken, as well as violent and combative. While some characters pop up and drop away depending on their relevance to Solanas s life in the moment, giving a disjointed feel to the narrative, Fahs ably fills a notable gap in feminist history with this accessible volume. Publishers Weekly Valerie Solanas is a biography of a compelling, charismatic, contemptible, and incorrigible woman. It is a biography of the effects of class in the United States on one woman s life. It is also the biography of an artist. Fahs ends with Solanas s own words from her 1977 corrected SCUM Manifesto 'The true artist is every self-confident, healthy female; and in a female society, the only Art, the only Culture, will be conceited, kookie, funkie females grooving on each other, cracking each other up, while cracking open the universe.' Lambda Literary Review This is an astonishing book about an astonishing life. It is a stark epic of a woman who was a symbol in and of an era. Valerie Solanas tells us many of the brutal facts of Valerie s existence, both before she exploded onto the scene in New York in the mid to late 1960s, as well as afterward. She was larger than life: a genuinely heroic figure. What I appreciate most about Fahs s biography is that Valerie Solanas emerges with a dignity that escaped her in life. Ti-Grace Atkinson, author of Amazon Odyssey Valerie Solanas was an enigma, an outsider even among misfits, and one of the most shocking radicals in a decade teeming with them. Breanne Fah s book is a long overdue excavation of the obsessions, paranoia, and rage that fueled both Solanas s visionary manifesto and her appalling attempt to murder Warhol. Cynthia Carr, author of Fire in the Belly: The Life and Times of David Wojnariowicz Finally, a biography of Valerie Solanas that does justice to her brilliant SCUM Manifesto and tragic life. In this narrative, Andy Warhol no longer defines who Valerie was. Breanne Fahs has written a compelling masterpiece sure to become a classic. Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of Outlaw Woman Breanne Fahs delivers the crucial backstory behind the deadly yet relevant aims of premier cultural deviant, Valerie Solanas, whose often indefensible edges, war cries, and logic of injury continue to haunt our era of desperate justice. Avita Ronell, author of Crack Wars Valerie Solanas finally provides an in-depth, decade-spanning history of Valerie s life, including mid-teen pregnancies, anti-essentialist college newspaper rebuttals, SCUM lectures, Up Your Ass casting calls, transience, letters of grammatical corrections to Majority Report, a continual emphasis from various sources on Valerie s intelligence, radicalism, humor, comedic improve timing, and intensity, and thorough discussions of her work dismantling and repudiating sexuality, gender, morality, marriage, the money system, and the patriarchical status quo. Natt Ann Carrera, musician This compelling biography shows the complexity of Valerie Solanas, placing her in the context of so many later-twentieth-century cultural realities-the commodity explosion of the art world, nuclear family damage and dysfunction, emergent baby-boomer generation narcissism, and the complicated internal struggles of the feminist movement. Catherine Morris, Sackler Family Curator at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art Valerie Solanas finally provides an in-depth, decade-spanning history of Valerie's life, including mid-teen pregnancies, anti-essentialist college newspaper rebuttals, SCUM lectures, Up Your Ass casting calls, transience, letters of grammatical corrections to Majority Report, a continual emphasis from various sources on Valerie's intelligence, radicalism, humor, comedic improve timing, and intensity, and thorough discussions of her work dismantling and repudiating sexuality, gender, morality, marriage, the money system, and the patriarchical status quo. --Natt Ann Carrera, singer/musician This compelling biography shows the complexity of Valerie Solanas, placing her in the context of so many later-twentieth-century cultural realities-the commodity explosion of the art world, nuclear family damage and dysfunction, emergent baby-boomer generation narcissism, and the complicated internal struggles of the feminist movement. --Catherine Morris, Sackler Family Curator at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art Valerie Solanas was an enigma, an outsider even among misfits, and one of the most shocking radicals in a decade teeming with them. Breanne Fah's book is a long overdue excavation of the obsessions, paranoia, and rage that fueled both Solanas's visionary manifesto and her appalling attempt to murder Warhol. --Cynthia Carr, author of Fire in the Belly: The Life and Times of David Wojnariowicz This is an astonishing book about an astonishing life. It is a stark epic of a woman who was a symbol in and of an era. Valerie Solanas tells us many of the brutal facts of Valerie's existence, both before she exploded onto the scene in New York in the mid to late 1960s, as well as afterward. She was larger than life: a genuinely heroic figure. What I appreciate most about Fahs's biography is that Valerie Solanas emerges with a dignity that escaped her in life. --Ti-Grace Atkinson, author of Amazon Odyssey Finally, a biography of Valerie Solanas that does justice to her brilliant SCUM Manifesto and tragic life. In this narrative, Andy Warhol no longer defines who Valerie was. Breanne Fahs has written a compelling masterpiece sure to become a classic. --Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of Outlaw Woman Breanne Fahs delivers the crucial backstory behind the deadly yet relevant aims of premier cultural deviant, Valerie Solanas, whose often indefensible edges, war cries, and logic of injury continue to haunt our era of desperate justice. --Avita Ronell, author of Crack Wars There's no question that Solanas's belief in the necessaity of theorizing from the gutter would have her denouncing today's inclusive, increasingly professional landscape of feminism. But perhaps she can rest easier (if not in peace) knowing that Fahs has painted a sympathetic portrait of her uncompromising life that -- for better and worse -- wears its powerful ugliness on its sleeve. --Andi Zeisler in LA Review of Books Solanas was a revolutionary artist, and the more time passes, the more significant and prescient her revolution appears to have been, which is in many ways all she ever cared about. How magnificently powerful, to maintain humor, insight, and self-confidence in the face of so much violence. A biography of Valerie Solanas then, hell yeah. You should go read her manifesto and then you should go read this. --T. Clutch Fleischmann in The Brooklyn Rail Rather than focusing on the Warhol shooting, Fahs gives a refreshing degree of weight to not only SCUM Manifesto--and its contribution to the birth of radical feminism--but also to Solanas's earlier writings and creative pursuits, such as her playwriting and attempts at publishing in periodicals. Fahs, who interviewed her subject's family, friends, enemies, as well as Warhol associates, doesn't shy away from how hated and feared Solanas was by many feminists of the era, such as Betty Friedan, but she portrays Solanas as melancholy, warm, and emotionally broken, as well as violent and combative. While some characters pop up and drop away depending on their relevance to Solanas's life in the moment, giving a disjointed feel to the narrative, Fahs ably fills a notable gap in feminist history with this accessible volume. --Publishers Weekly Valerie Solanas is a biography of a compelling, charismatic, contemptible, and incorrigible woman. It is a biography of the effects of class in the United States on one woman's life. It is also the biography of an artist. Fahs ends with Solanas's own words from her 1977 corrected SCUM Manifesto: 'The true artist is every self-confident, healthy female; and in a female society, the only Art, the only Culture, will be conceited, kookie, funkie females grooving on each other, cracking each other up, while cracking open the universe.' --Julie R. Enszer for The Lambda Literary Review Valerie Solanas finally provides an in-depth, decade-spanning history of Valerie's life, including mid-teen pregnancies, anti-essentialist college newspaper rebuttals, SCUM lectures, Up Your Ass casting calls, transience, letters of grammatical corrections to Majority Report, a continual emphasis from various sources on Valerie's intelligence, radicalism, humor, comedic improve timing, and intensity, and thorough discussions of her work dismantling and repudiating sexuality, gender, morality, marriage, the money system, and the patriarchical status quo. --Natt Ann Carrera, singer/musician This compelling biography shows the complexity of Valerie Solanas, placing her in the context of so many later-twentieth-century cultural realities-the commodity explosion of the art world, nuclear family damage and dysfunction, emergent baby-boomer generation narcissism, and the complicated internal struggles of the feminist movement. --Catherine Morris, Sackler Family Curator at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art Valerie Solanas was an enigma, an outsider even among misfits, and one of the most shocking radicals in a decade teeming with them. Breanne Fah's book is a long overdue excavation of the obsessions, paranoia, and rage that fueled both Solanas's visionary manifesto and her appalling attempt to murder Warhol. --Cynthia Carr, author of Fire in the Belly: The Life and Times of David Wojnariowicz This is an astonishing book about an astonishing life. It is a stark epic of a woman who was a symbol in and of an era. Valerie Solanas tells us many of the brutal facts of Valerie's existence, both before she exploded onto the scene in New York in the mid to late 1960s, as well as afterward. She was larger than life: a genuinely heroic figure. What I appreciate most about Fahs's biography is that Valerie Solanas emerges with a dignity that escaped her in life. --Ti-Grace Atkinson, author of Amazon Odyssey Valerie Solanas finally provides an in-depth, decade-spanning history of Valerie's life, including mid-teen pregnancies, anti-essentialist college newspaper rebuttals, SCUM lectures, Up Your Ass casting calls, transience, letters of grammatical corrections to Majority Report, a continual emphasis from various sources on Valerie's intelligence, radicalism, humor, comedic improve timing, and intensity, and thorough discussions of her work dismantling and repudiating sexuality, gender, morality, marriage, the money system, and the patriarchical status quo. --Natt Ann Carrera, singer/musician This compelling biography shows the complexity of Valerie Solanas, placing her in the context of so many later-twentieth-century cultural realities-the commodity explosion of the art world, nuclear family damage and dysfunction, emergent baby-boomer generation narcissism, and the complicated internal struggles of the feminist movement. --Catherine Morris, Sackler Family Curator at the Elizabeth A. Sackler Center for Feminist Art Valerie Solanas was an enigma, an outsider even among misfits, and one of the most shocking radicals in a decade teeming with them. Breanne Fah's book is a long overdue excavation of the obsessions, paranoia, and rage that fueled both Solanas's visionary manifesto and her appalling attempt to murder Warhol. --Cynthia Carr, author of Fire in the Belly: The Life and Times of David Wojnariowicz This is an astonishing book about an astonishing life. It is a stark epic of a woman who was a symbol in and of an era. Valerie Solanas tells us many of the brutal facts of Valerie's existence, both before she exploded onto the scene in New York in the mid to late 1960s, as well as afterward. She was larger than life: a genuinely heroic figure. What I appreciate most about Fahs's biography is that Valerie Solanas emerges with a dignity that escaped her in life. --Ti-Grace Atkinson, author of Amazon Odyssey Finally, a biography of Valerie Solanas that does justice to her brilliant SCUM Manifesto and tragic life. In this narrative, Andy Warhol no longer defines who Valerie was. Breanne Fahs has written a compelling masterpiece sure to become a classic. --Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, author of Outlaw Woman Breanne Fahs delivers the crucial backstory behind the deadly yet relevant aims of premier cultural deviant, Valerie Solanas, whose often indefensible edges, war cries, and logic of injury continue to haunt our era of desperate justice. --Avita Ronell, author of Crack Wars There's no question that Solanas's belief in the necessaity of theorizing from the gutter would have her denouncing today's inclusive, increasingly professional landscape of feminism. But perhaps she can rest easier (if not in peace) knowing that Fahs has painted a sympathetic portrait of her uncompromising life that -- for better and worse -- wears its powerful ugliness on its sleeve. --Andi Zeisler in LA Review of Books Solanas was a revolutionary artist, and the more time passes, the more significant and prescient her revolution appears to have been, which is in many ways all she ever cared about. How magnificently powerful, to maintain humor, insight, and self-confidence in the face of so much violence. A biography of Valerie Solanas then, hell yeah. You should go read her manifesto and then you should go read this. --T. Clutch Fleischmann in The Brooklyn Rail Rather than focusing on the Warhol shooting, Fahs gives a refreshing degree of weight to not only SCUM Manifesto--and its contribution to the birth of radical feminism--but also to Solanas's earlier writings and creative pursuits, such as her playwriting and attempts at publishing in periodicals. Fahs, who interviewed her subject's family, friends, enemies, as well as Warhol associates, doesn't shy away from how hated and feared Solanas was by many feminists of the era, such as Betty Friedan, but she portrays Solanas as melancholy, warm, and emotionally broken, as well as violent and combative. While some characters pop up and drop away depending on their relevance to Solanas's life in the moment, giving a disjointed feel to the narrative, Fahs ably fills a notable gap in feminist history with this accessible volume. --Publishers Weekly Author InformationBreanne Fahs is an associate professor of women and gender studies at Arizona State University, where she specializes in studying women's sexuality, critical embodiment studies, radical feminism, and political activism. She has a BA in women's studies/gender studies and psychology from Occidental College and a PhD in women's studies and clinical psychology from the University of Michigan. She has published widely in feminist, social science, and humanities journals, as well as the books Performing Sex with SUNY Press (2011) and The Moral Panics of Sexuality (2013). She is the director of the Feminist Research on Gender and Sexuality Group at Arizona State University, and also works as a private practice clinical psychologist specializing in sexuality, couples work, and trauma recovery. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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