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The Post-structuralist Vulva Coloring Book
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Title |
The Post-structuralist Vulva Coloring Book
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Authors and Contributors |
By (author) Elly Blue
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By (author) Meggyn Pomerleau
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Physical Properties |
Format:Paperback / softback | Pages:128 | Dimensions(mm): Height 254,Width 203 |
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Category/Genre | Handicrafts, decorative arts and crafts |
ISBN/Barcode |
9781621061380
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Audience | |
Illustrations |
1 Illustrations, unspecified
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Publishing Details |
Publisher |
Microcosm Publishing
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Imprint |
Microcosm Publishing
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Publication Date |
15 November 2016 |
Publication Country |
United States
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Description
Color away the false binaries between male and female, words and text, inside and outside, art and nature. As you meditate on the sameness and difference of the vulvas on each page, you will grow to question your interpellation into dominant systems of knowledge. By overwhelming the senses with vulvas, you will interrogate the meaning and very existence of this social construct we call the 'vulva' and the instructions for living that come with it. No longer must vulvas be either crudely objectified or shrouded in mystery! All hail the vulva! The vulva hails you!
Author Biography
Elly Blue survived an intensive education in the liberal arts and humanities and lives in Portland, OR where she writes about feminism and bicycling. Meggyn Pomerleau is a designer living in Portland. She enjoys cycling, burritos, and her dog.
Reviews"I would really like to have slipped imperceptibly into this lecture...I would have preferred to be enveloped in words, borne way beyond all possible beginnings. At the moment of speaking, I would like to have perceived a nameless voice, long preceding me, leaving me merely to enmesh myself in it, taking up its cadence, and to lodge myself, when no one was looking, in its interstices as if it had paused an instant, in suspense, to beckon to me. There would have been no beginnings: instead, speech would proceed from me, while I stood in its path--a slender gap--the point of its possible disappearance." --Michel Foucault, from the book
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