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5.0 out of 5 stars Intense love-literature!
I love Andrea Dworkin. Her books are so filled with rage and utter hatred that the most vile texts pale in comparison. This is the blistering manifesto of a soul that is bent on revenge and destruction of her enemies. Dworkin stews and boils in the flames of abuse, victimization and rejection that consume her wild imagination. Dworkin is out to roll over any man-folk and...
Published on Feb 18 2003 by jason gilmour

versus
3.0 out of 5 stars A different look
"Heartbreak: The Political Memoir of a Feminist Militant" by Andrea Dworkin was kind of a surprising little book. I wanted it because I wanted to know more about Dworkin's career and politics, and I learned some about each from this, but obliquely, like through a scrim. The writing feels like it's been done from a distance, almost, which I guess most memoirs are, but when...
Published on Oct 17 2002


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5.0 out of 5 stars Intense love-literature!, Feb 18 2003
By 
jason gilmour (Toronto, Ontario) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Heartbreak (Paperback)
I love Andrea Dworkin. Her books are so filled with rage and utter hatred that the most vile texts pale in comparison. This is the blistering manifesto of a soul that is bent on revenge and destruction of her enemies. Dworkin stews and boils in the flames of abuse, victimization and rejection that consume her wild imagination. Dworkin is out to roll over any man-folk and weaker female that stands in her way. Dworkin's MASSIVE intelect is focused like a super powered lazer beam on the very heart of the he-man patriarchy that has caused her so much pain and suffering. Dworkin's STEAMROLLERESQUE prose will send even the most macho he-devil a-runnin'. Dworkin ain't the BIG name in feminism for nothing.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Andrea's Memoir, Sep 10 2006
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This review is from: Heartbreak (Paperback)
I feel compelled to respond to the synopsis of "Heartbreak: Memoirs of a Feminist Militant" provided above by "Cahners Business Information, Inc". I found this book to be touching, well written, and prescient. While many will find Andrea's views too extreme for their comfort, I think she was one of this century's great minds. For me, her humanity and her compassion shine all the way through this memoir.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Andrea's memoir, Sep 9 2006
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I feel compelled to respond to the synopsis of "Heartbreak: Memoirs of a Feminist Militant" provided above by "Cahners Business Information, Inc". I found this book to be touching, well written, and prescient. While many will find Andrea's views too extreme for their comfort, I think she was one of this century's great minds. For me, her humanity and her compassion shine all the way through this memoir.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Read Brison instead, Dec 2 2002
By A Customer
I was kind of psyched to read Heartbreak. I'd come to AD because of research I had done on hate speech and pornography; she coauthored anti-pornography legislation with Catherine McKinnon. Then I thought, well, someone so famous and yet seemingly crazy (consensual sex is rape, penetration is violence, etc--) must have something interesting going on.... Her longwinded denunciations of heterosexual men and sex elsewhere contrast with her own life as she tells it here. Yes, she has horror stories about rape, but also 'glory stories' about bedding famous artists and teachers she worshipped.

Frankly, this book reads well in parts -- there are some evocative stories, and Dworkin has a convert's zeal -- but the bulk is painfully bad. It's the kind of thing you should tell your therapist -- who gets paid to listen to your evasions and half-truths. Google "doubts about dworkin" for a Guardian article on Dworkin's rape accusation (Dworkin backs away a little from this in Heartbreak.)

I spend my life reading books I don't agree with, trying to tease out the fair bits from the rhetoric. Realizing that I could have deep, irrational reasons for not liking her (and that this would perhaps be a Dworkin fan's first response), I worked doubly hard to read with sympathy. I gave her every free pass in the book: I trusted blindly every statistic and every second-hand story, down to the last detail. Any construction of the facts that could resolve apparent errors of logic or reasoning I gave her.

In the end, my efforts were a failure. Dworkin has gone off the deep end into paranoid delusion, hurting those she claims to help with her own neurosis and need for self-display. It verges into a hatred that is unclearly focused on both herself and others. There is no stance or opinion in this book coherent enough to agree or disagree with.

If you want to read a book that truthfully confronts the nature of rape and violence from a first person perspective, you should read Aftermath, by Susan Brison. To read Dworkin's book is perhaps only -- for both women and men -- to self-flagellate for a few hours before returning to Planet Earth. Where we are then sadly free again to ignore the real problems that Dworkin only dances past -- rape, sexual violence, and the misogynistic discourses that surround and fill our society.

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3.0 out of 5 stars A different look, Oct 17 2002
By A Customer
"Heartbreak: The Political Memoir of a Feminist Militant" by Andrea Dworkin was kind of a surprising little book. I wanted it because I wanted to know more about Dworkin's career and politics, and I learned some about each from this, but obliquely, like through a scrim. The writing feels like it's been done from a distance, almost, which I guess most memoirs are, but when she's writing about the stories of women who were
raped or prostituted, the gloves come off, the profanity is on and she is harsh, tough and up-close.

She's harsh, politically, too. She has very definite positions and seems to believe that if you don't think like her, you're in most ways a hypocrite. She is very negative about the national organization of NOW, but positive about local chapters and organizers. She does at one point concede that some of the people who don't want to abolish pornography on free-speech grounds aren't all evil, but that's as close as she gets to
empathy for those on the left who are working, but not in tandem with her. I had read in a gender issues text at one time an essay that she co-wrote with Catherine A. MacKinnon - they wanted to get pornography outlawed on civil rights precedent - but this was pretty "naked" in comparison with that persuasive writing.

The title comes from the idea that she feels heartbreak all the time because of the women she meets who have been hurt by men and by women who would rather please men than help their sisters. She does seem very raw and disappointed with the world. A quote on the back of the book reads, "We should all treat
Andrea Dworkin like a national treasure for caring enough to engage our passions - wherever upon the political or social spectrum they may fall." This was written by Deirdre Bair, who wrote a good biography I've read about Simone de Beauvoir. I think I would agree; I know that Dworkin has done important work to raise the awareness about women's issues, particularly pornography, in her lifetime. Even if you disagree, I think having a considered opinion is better than just following the status quo. With Dworkin around, the latter won't be an option.

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2.0 out of 5 stars Poles Apart, July 6 2002
By A Customer
This book is many ways the opposite of one of Dworkin's critical feminist works. Whereas the latter are compelling, this is quite boring (in the sense of nothing new); where they are seamlessly convincing, this is self-conscious (like an exercise in good writing). Also, readers of the radical political texts, might be disturbed by the sensibility here--impersonal sex seems more often a cool thing, than a sexist thing, and there is a kind loudness or unconvinging extremeness in the reportage (Bennington is little more than a brothel and high school teachers are like gods). This is unfortunate, because it might make some readers (not this one, I don't think) question her feminist texts as overstated or too extreme.
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1.0 out of 5 stars What a cow of a book, April 10 2002
By A Customer
I'm an independent, and by our culture's definition- sexy- young woman who has suffered my share of adversity, depression, addiction -you name it. I'm also a Harvard-educated feminist intellectual and I find nothing to share in common with this beast of a woman or this beast of a book. What is the deal, here? I can't help but feel if Dworkin had been born "pretty' she wouldn't have such a chip on her shoulder. As if we can't see through that! Give me a break. I'd give this book zero stars if I could.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A very personal, warm story by a well-known figure, April 10 2002
Andrea Dworkin is one of the most controversial feminists of her generation and writes here about the people and ideas which influenced her political awareness. Chapters recount a bookworm childhood in Delaware, early activist years, and her growing disillusionment with the feminist movement's struggles. Heartbreak is a very personal, warm story by a well-known figure.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Self-indulgence, Mar 10 2002
By 
Kerry Walters (Lewisburg, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
It's difficult to take this memoir seriously. It simmers and sometimes boils with anger at a world that appears not to have accepted Andrea Dworkin as the intellectual and moral genius she's confident she is. Although Ms. Dworkin assures us in passing that she doesn't care whether or not she's understood by others, she clearly does want to be understood. More precisely, she wants to be admired and adulated As a consequence, practically every scenario of her life that she writes about in this rather painful book paints her in the role of either self-sacrificing rebel or bloodied victim. Her high school teachers try to ruin her because she's an independent thinker (as do her professors at Bennington--who, by the way, regularly procure coeds, she says, for visiting dignitaries), Allen Ginsberg mistreats her because she has the courage to condemn his sexual preferences, men attack her because of her crusade against their penchant for pornography and rape, and turncoat women disagree with her because they've sold out to the establishment by becoming "compromisers." But Ms. Dworkin--she manages through sheer force of will to remain pure in the midst of all this corruption. And lest we be tempted to conclude that her claims to righteousness are self-indulgent back-patting, she assures us that what might be taken for obnoxious self-righteousness in fact is a life-long "spartan" habit of courageous truth-telling--which has earned her (you guessed it!)the enmity of less truthful compromisers.

Oh dear. What's genuinely "heartbreaking" about this book is its unintended Dorian Grey transparency. In reading it we catch a terrible vision of how a lifetime of hatred, anger, and old-fashioned pique ultimately corrode a person's relationship with the world.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Electric politics, Mar 6 2002
I've never read anything by Dworkin before, so I was quite amazed by this collection of memoir essays. In each, Andrea Dworkin relays memories that helped shape her politics, her life, her intensity. For me, the book came alive and turned electric like Eve Ensler's "The Vagina Monologues" did, where ultimately it caused my eyes to become more open to social politics. Dworkin's memoir shows that sometimes tiny events can cause one to change, and sometimes the change is almost imperceptible until later reflection. It's amazing to see how a voracious reader and a zealous advocate began.
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Heartbreak
Heartbreak by Andrea Dworkin (Paperback - Nov 23 2002)
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