@SteveAbra77@JamesEsses@UniofOxford Using this reasoning, a male lecturer would not be able to teach about the character Tess of the Durbevilles by Thomas Hardy to female students. Or about Lady Macbeth by William Shakespeare to female students
@IsntWorkingPod@JamesEsses@UniofOxford@wadhamoxford On the second point….does this mean that a male lecturer cannot explain Lasy Macbeth to female students? That only a female lecturer is able to talk about womanhood?
@Shilisad1@JamesEsses Last time this lecturer wore a similar outfit it was to deliberately challenge and caricature ideas of monstrosity in a lecture on monsters. This outfit caricatures the idea of womanhood. Unfortunately that point cannot be made with a sneaked photo
@ArielBos1@JamesEsses@UniofOxford I know this lecturer, who is the kindest gentlest person you can imagine. This outfit was chosen as a deliberate caricature of womanhood and was part of the thesis
@JamesEsses@UniofOxford This lecturer wore a similar outfit for a lecture months ago on monsters in Greek literature as a deliberate challenge to ideas of monstrosity. I’m pretty sure this outfit was chosen to caricature ideas of womanhood, a more sophisticated thesis than you appreciate, I think.
@JamesEsses@UniofOxford I know this lecturer, who happens to be not only extremely clever but the gentlest, kindest most empathetic human being you could ever meet.
@PenFarthing sorry to contact direct. I bought 48kg of working dog food for a charity to take to Ukraine for rescue dogs, but they have limited space on their truck and suggested that I contact you as your organisation is also feeding dogs over there?
@uncanny_eli White women do very well as novelists too. I’d be interested to know if they are traditionally read more by women than men, through. Are biological women more novel readers than biological men?