Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Unavailable
The SCUM Manifesto
Unavailable
The SCUM Manifesto
Unavailable
The SCUM Manifesto
Ebook44 pages47 minutes

The SCUM Manifesto

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

Currently unavailable

Currently unavailable

About this ebook

On June 3, 1968, a young woman named Valerie Solanas shot pop artist Andy Warhol from almost point blank range at the artist's Factory studio in New York. Amazingly, two out of three shots missed, and Warhol was able to (narrowly) survive his single wound. The resulting furore of publicity ensured that Valerie Solanas, and her vitriolic anti-male tract The SCUM Manifesto, endured an everlasting notoriety thereafter. The SCUM Manifesto, written in 1967 and originally self-published in 1968, remains a powerful and sustained attack on the human male, a species which Solanas once vowed to erdicate from the face of the Earth (SCUM is sometimes said to be an acronym of Society for Cutting Up Men). As such, it stands as one of the primary documents of radical feminism; it is also an avant-garde work of alienation, and a compelling insight into the mind of an innate outsider.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 4, 2015
ISBN9781908694942
Unavailable
The SCUM Manifesto
Author

Valerie Solanas

Valerie Jean Solanas (1936-1988) was an American radical feminist writer who is best known for SCUM Manifesto, as well as for the attempted murder of artist Andy Warhol.

Read more from Valerie Solanas

Related to The SCUM Manifesto

Related ebooks

Philosophy For You

View More

Related articles

Reviews for The SCUM Manifesto

Rating: 3.6423357518248176 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

137 ratings8 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Een vreselijk werk dat gemeend oproept tot de vernietiging van de man, interessant voor wie wil lezen hoe kwaad sommige vrouwen zijn geworden van onderdrukking - A terrible work that demands the destruction of the male sex, interesting to read how angry some women have become because of suppression
  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Why are manifestos so often written by crazies? This 50-page anti-male screed by the woman most famous for shooting Andy Warhol is, well, kind of hard to read. I can ignore the man hatred - that's a matter of opinion - but many of her suggestions for improving the world are simply batty. First, that her notion of communism would work. It's inconceivable that all the people of the world would work together towards Solanas's idea of the common good. Second, "automation" does not mean zero work. Machines must be created and maintained. (Of course, I suppose Solanas would expect men to take care of this.) Third, old age is not a disease, and scientists do not hold the secret to immortality. That's patently absurd. If they did, don't you think these supposedly selfish and insecure men would have made themselves immortal by now? So in short, while this was a reasonably entertaining read in parts purely for the novelty factor, it's not something I would recommend. They're not dangerous ideas, merely nonsensical ones.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    "There's no reason why a society consisting of rational beings capable of empathizing with each other, complete and having no natural reason to compete, should have a government, laws, or leaders."
    I wish I had run across this flaming manifesto much earlier. I would love to quote it at inopportune times for the rest of my life.
    "Self-forgetfulness should be one's goal, not self-absorption."
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Skip the tedious introduction from Ronell which adds nothing and go straight to the hilarious, furious and strangely prescient (in places) manifesto. Just watched the excellent I Shot Andy Warhol and it reads better if you have the harsh New Yawk accent in your head.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The S.C.U.M. Manifesto is brief, sensationalist, witty, and extreme, and is about the desirability of the destruction of the entire male gender. It's easy to see why many people would find it offensive or insane, because that's basically what it seems to have been meant to be. But once I read not merely the Manifesto itself, but learned a little about Valerie Solanis herself, a different picture emerged. The brief bio of her in the back of this edition is sufficient to help understand her motivations. For those who accuse Solanas of being nothing more than a man-hater, consider that she was molested by her father, beaten by her grandfather, and panhandled and worked as a prostitute to support herself. She had good reason to hate men, but at the same time there's a distinct ambiguity to her anti-male rage, it seems odd to hear her taunt male sexuality by declaring it "incapable of zestfully, lustfully tearing off a piece", and at times she tries to rationalize complete disinterest in sex; "Sex is not part of a relationship; on the contrary, it is a solitary experience, non-creative, a gross waste of time". She even contradicts her own premise; "A woman not only takes her identity and individuality for granted, but knows instinctively that the only wrong is to hurt others, and that the meaning of life is love" (an odd sentiment in a Manifesto about the destruction of the male gender), but also seems consciously aware of it. The purpose of the Manifesto is, after all, to rant. To entertain. And since every sentence explodes from the page with the sort of intensity usually reserved for the most extreme of religious fundamentalists, but with profanity and irreverence that the religious could never condone, it succeeds wonderfully. And furthermore it successfully conveys a message, albeit an over-the-top, exaggerated one, of dissatisfaction with both gender relations and society in general. Was Valerie Solanas insane? It certainly seems that she spent portions of her life that way. But it also seems that at times she was not merely lucid, but quite talented. If anything, the mental illness she suffered from should be viewed in the context of the traumas she endured in life. Given the nature of those traumas, her anger at men and mental instability seem entirely predictable. And the fact that she penned such an extraordinary work, one that has lasted nearly 20 years now beyond her own lifespan in spite of the troubles she had to endure, serves as evidence of a talent which couldn't be completely extinguished even by the harshest adversities. A highly recommended read for anyone who wants something that fearlessly challenges the norms of society as we know it.

    2 people found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As a rant, it's an excellent one and very funny in parts.

    I had issues with the ableism of it, and I'm not sure what to do with the anti-gay slurs. Which seem ... not to be slurs to Solanas? Which doesn't give her the right to use them.

    Read as a parody of the typical women-hating rant found in an awful lot of books by Manly Man, it's brilliance. Read literally, it's horrifying in parts and very, very clever in others.

    For a 60-page work, it's generating more thought than anything else I've read this year.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    SCUM is short for “Society for Cutting Up Men”, and the manifesto is Valerie Solanas’ infamous text about why the destruction of the male sex is necessary, and her visions about a society free of men. A Stockholm theatre has done a staged version of the manifesto, more or less just presenting the text as it is, causing huge controversy. Public anti-feminist voices have been overbidding each other in condemning the performance, and the actress (but not the male director, go figure) has received numerous death threats, forcing her to play several shows under police protection. A few weeks ago I went to see the performance, and it was really good. This prompted me to pick up the text itself, which I got for Christmas last year from my brother, and has been lingering on my shelf for a year.There’s no doubt Solanas text is very strong medicine indeed. The male is presented as a genetic defect, incapable of any feelings and genuine relations to other, which has created a highly destructive society only to mask this fact. It’s very much a shame that Solanas actually shot Andy Warhol – this act makes it hard to overlook the possibility to read her agenda literally. Otherwise this whole work can just as easily read as a sharp metaphor. But really, you need to have an extremely low degree of self-distance in order to be as offended by this as many white hetero men have been. Instead, if you dare to actually look past the verbal slugging and extreme positioning of Solanas, deranged at times, there are some genuine points made. There is stuff here for a western man to actually ponder. And then, reading this text actually becomes a rather liberating experience. Also, Solanas is funny as hell at times.Absolutely not for everyone, but if you can stand getting slapped around a bit (or well, maybe more than a bit), this is a manifesto well worth reading.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book is very good because it explains feminism. It provides biological, historical and sociological observations on the nature of men which is very good. It explains that men must be killed and women reproduce by cloning and details the methods to achieve that end which is useful information. I like this book because it provides a good explanation on feminism.Also it is like a double-edged troll because with this book you can troll both feminists and non-feminists which is convenient because you do not need to use two different trolls.Also it can be found for free on the Google.