Talk:Marilyn French

Latest comment: 3 years ago by Laurier in topic Polish descent

Smoking edit

I have removed the extraneous comment about French's smoking habit which precedes the diagnosis of esophageal cancer. The Wiki article on this condition lists 17 potential causes, of which smoking is only one. French lived till she was 79 years old. Fairlightseven 27/07/09

   —Preceding unsigned comment added by 92.9.238.101 (talk) 10:26, 27 July 2009 (UTC)Reply 

Please allow time (i.e. one minute) to allow people to complete their edits.

Finnish edit

What is the meaning of Naisten Huone, Vertavuotava Sydän, Vallan Tuolla Puolen, Sota Naisia Vastaan, Kesämies and Kausi Helvetissä? Is this a joke or what??? <KF> 23:13, September 3, 2005 (UTC)

Is this Swedish? ABBA's song "The Day Before You Came" has a line that says "I must have read a while/The latest one by Marilyn French or something in that style." I have not heard of her otherwise until now (I clicked Random Article.) Maybe Ms. French was better known in Sweden than in the U.S. Nelson Ricardo 23:26, 14 September 2005 (UTC)Reply
They look Finnish to me - perhaps the publishers of her books in Scandinavia? Shimgray | talk | 21:47, 18 December 2005 (UTC)Reply

Anti-feminist edit

Show me a legitimite source that states that these critics are all against feminism. If you can, then it stays. Otherwise, it is original research and will be changed. Bsd987 21:13, 19 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Bsd987, the sources linked are each of them explicitly opposed to feminism as a movement; they state this themselves ("Cool Tools 4 Men," the third source linked, even lists "Anti-Feminism" by name in the title of its main page.) If you do a Google search for the "quote", you'll find the following results:
  1. BrainyQuote
  2. A page from "Sex War", which states "Nevertheless I want to use this phrase as an example of the endemic anti-male sexism within the feminist movement" and elsewhere states "I am not saying feminism is like a hate movement, my hypothesis is that it is a hate movement."
  3. WhatQuote
  4. WikiPedia
  5. WikiPedia mirror at Answers.com
  6. CyberNation quote site
  7. Article from Cool Tools 4 Men: "Feminists have used the word "rapist" to attack men in the same way that another hate-group - white-supremacists - used "Nigger" to attack black people." The website explicitly describes "Anti-Feminism" as one of the topics it covers.
  8. ThinkExist.com quote site
  9. Critical user review of "The War Against Women" on Amazon.com, from user david_byron, stating "Just in case you forgot -- this tripe is mainstream feminism. This book is an excellent answer to those who want to pretend feminist bigotry represents only the "extremists" in the movement."
  10. MensNewsDaily article by Carey Roberts, explicit opponent of feminism as a movement
  11. Politics - Feminism - Misandrist Quotes by T. R. Parker, from a quote list collected by "G. Schrock." "Victimal feminist thinking has at its driving core the concerted effort to avoid self-responsibility." The compiler, Gladden Schrock, is a professor of drama at Bennington College.
  12. "Feminist Hate Speech", from the same quote list collected by "G. Schrock."
  13. ThinkExist quote site
  14. Quote list from fatherseqrts.org. Claims not to be anti-feminist: "These Feminist don't represent the true feminist movement, understand there are two. Feminist for equality which most of us believe in and feminist for choice. ..." Taken from the same quote list collected by "G. Schrock."
  15. Comment on blog post at feministing, from commenter remarking "hmmmmm is feminsim a hate movement???" Taken from the same quote list collected by "G. Schrock."
  16. WhatQuote quote site
  17. WorldOfQuotes quote site
  18. Article from The Backlash!, by Allistair McAllistar. Criticizes "Dr. French and her feminist colleagues," "these feminist mandates," etc. Publication takes its title from a book by Susan Faludi about anti-feminism in the 1980s, and is explicitly anti-feminist; cf. for example the recurring "Feminism Unclothed" feature: [1], [2], [3], etc.
... and so on.
I conclude that the folks who pull the quote out of its context at all fall into two groups: (1) bad quote websites, and (2) critics explicitly opposed to feminism, who present the quote as evidence of "misandry" by French and, by association, feminism as a movement. You don't need to make a synthetic conclusion to figure this out; the critics tell you what they are themselves. Those who use it for polemical purposes (rather than simply "quoting" it without either context or comment, like the bad quote sites do) are overwhelmingly explicit opponents of feminism. Thus, "anti-feminist critics" is the best description for them, unless you think that "anti-feminist" means something other than "against feminism." (I don't.) "Critics" simpliciter does not tell you anything useful at all about who is making the criticsm, and amounts to a rather obnoxious form of weasel-wording that is already far too common on WikiPedia.
Hope this helps. Radgeek 22:33, 19 March 2006 (UTC)Reply

Education edit

The obituary I read yesterday stated that French actually earned a Master's at Hofstra during her marriage and soon started working there as an instructor of English. In other words, she may have left the school to marry but returned while still married, and it wasn't "years later" that she began teaching at Hofstra. I can't locate the obit, but perhaps someone needs to check the details of French's education and possibly correct the article.Lolliapaulina51 (talk) 16:01, 5 May 2009 (UTC)Reply

Author in Popular Entertainment edit

The author is featured in the ABBA song of 1982, "The Day Before You Came," a dark five minute vocal solo by Agnetha Faltskog accompanied by a driving minor rhythm. Without mentioning him or the story of their romance, the song outlines the ennui of her life before "he" came into her life. Near the end of this plaintive bit of her history, she inserts in the narrative that she would have been reading "Marilyn French, or something of that style." Rather clearly, in her new life, she has turned away from this genre.70.130.44.37 (talk) 21:38, 24 January 2011 (UTC)Reply

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External links modified edit

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Polish descent edit

This biography says "Marilyn French was born in New York into a poor family of Polish descent." Does anyone know if that is true, can anyone find more (and more reliable) sources for that? I do think the novel 'Her Mother's Daughter' (1987), which is written mostly from the perspective of Anastasia (Stacey) has a lot of autobiographical elements: French is also born in New York, her parents are named E. Charles Edwards en Isabel Hazz Edwards, which is quite similar to Stacey's parents in the book (Ed and Isabelle (Belle) Dabrowski who later change their name to Stevens), and French married Robert French and kept his last name after the divorce, and became famous as a journalist and writer with that name while Stacey married Brad Carpenter and kept his last name after the divorce and became famous as a journalism photographer and art photographer with that name. Can anyone help me find more information about this? Thanx in advance, Laurier (talk) 07:12, 30 July 2020 (UTC)Reply

To make it more clear:
Name in real life Name in real life after change Name in the book Name in the book after change
Marylin Edwards
artist (author)
born in New York
after marriage to Robert French:
Marylin French
Anastasia (Stacey) Stevens
artist (photographer)
born in New York
after marriage to Brad Carpenter:
Stacey Carpenter
Father: E. Charles ... (?) E. Charles Edwards Ed Dabrowski Ed Stevens
Mother: Isabel Hazz ... (?) Isabel Hazz Edwards Isabelle (Belle) Dabrowski Belle Stevens
I hope Someone can help me. Laurier (talk) 16:15, 23 December 2020 (UTC)Reply