<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>"An eloquent work. Somer Brodribb not only gives us a feminist critique of postmodernism with its masculinist predeterminants in existentialism, its Freudian footholdings and its Sadean values, but in the very form and texture of the critique, she literally creates new discourse in feminist theory. Brodribb has transcended not only postmodernism but its requirement that we speak in its voice even when criticizing it. She creates a language that is at once poetic and powerfully analytical. Her insistent and compelling radical critique refuses essentialism--from both masculinist thinkers and their women followers. She demystifies postmodernism to reveal that it and its antecedents represent yet another mundane version of patriarchal politics. Ultimately Brodribb returns us to feminist theory with the message that we must refuse to be derivative and continue to originate theory and politics from the condition of women under male domination."<br>--Kathleen Barry, author of <i>Female Sexual Slavery</i></p> <p>An iconoclastic work brilliantly undertaken . . . <i>Nothing Mat(T)ers</i> magnificently shows that postmodernism is the cultural capital of late patriarchy. It is the art of self- display, the conceit of masculine self and the science of reproductive and genetic engineering in an ecstatic Nietzschean cycle of statis."<br>--Andre Michel</p> <p><i>Nothing Mat(T)ers</i> encapsulates in its title the valuelessness of the current academic fad of postmodernism. Somer Brodribb has written a brave and witty book demolishing the gods and goddesses of postmodernism by deconstructing their method and de-centering their subjects and, in the process, has deconstructed deconstructionism and decentered decentering! This is a long-awaited and much-needed book from a tough- minded, embodied, and unflinching scholar."<br>--Janice Raymond</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p>If one has any interest in 'postmodernism' whatsoever, Somer Brodribb's excellent Nothing Mat(t)ers is required reading.[...] Confronts the absence of the subject and privileging of the 'system' or structure over experience in postmodernism...This book needs to be read and pondered....--David Clippinger, <i>Rain Taxi (1999)</i><br><br><p>What we need to escape, according to Brodribb, is not the body, but the dualistic thinking that finds its latest expression in postmodern anti-materiality. --Ellen Travis, <i>Herizons</i> (Winter 1993)<br><br>This brave, brilliant (and funny!) book by a Canadian feminist is the antidote for intellectual toxicities caused by decentered deconstructionist detritus. The Plucky Wench of the Year Awards definitely goes to Brodribb, for proving the emperor has no clothes or brains.--<i>Ms. Magazine</i> (May/June 1993)<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br><p><b>Somer Brodribb</b> taught feminist theory and politics at the University of Victoria in the 1990s. Her experience of backlash is outlined in <i>The Equity Franchise</i>, <i>CCLOW</i>, <i>Women's Education</i>, 1996, and is the focus of Dorothy Smith's chapter <i>Texts and Repression</i> in <i>Writing the Social</i>, 1999.</p><p>She published on organizing strategies and power. One of her best articles is about establishing a shelter: <i>Winonah's</i> RFR, 1988. She currently lives in England, and her short fiction has appeared in <i>The Sandhopper Lover</i> (2009), produced by the Welsh publisher, Cinnamon Press, online at <i>Writers' Hub</i> (2012), online at <i>Notes from the Underground</i> (2012) and in <i>The French Literary Review</i>, (2012).
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