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692 reviews for:

SCUM Manifesto

Valerie Solanas

3.69 AVERAGE


i definitely don’t agree with every point she made, but after two decades of being female, this book was blissfully cathartic. we need radical feminism like this more now than ever
fast-paced

enjoyed solanas’s perspective and frank way of writing. a great confrontation of the patriarchy.

sometimes it's just nice to see pure unadulterated hatred
funny tense fast-paced

book club book. i’m not into manifestos anymore i guess??? very ableist and terfy. all in for killing all men though

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Who knew men could be so sensitive? The inventors of satire and dark comedy are getting their panties in a twist because a woman is talking about men the same way their precious daddy Freud and other misogynists talked about women for centuries. Honestly, reading the reviews makes me laugh almost as much as reading this manifesto.
fast-paced

A little satirical bioessentialism, just as a treat…

Quick read that I totally loved. Whether you think it’s the ramblings of a psychotic lesbian or the inspired word of a visionary too ahead of her time, SCUM manifesto is definitely an interesting experience. My takeaway is that it’s a little bit of both. Very interesting to get into this woman’s head. As someone very trans-affirming in my feminism, the reduction of gender as very binary and the discussion of chromosomes is a little eye-roll inducing in 2025, but it’s a time capsule written by a woman taking very astute societal observations and bringing them to the most extreme conclusions and solutions possible. 

Something I found really incredible  is the way I identified with her observations of the male-female gender flipping/projection. Through my adolescence, I always felt confused by traditional gender roles, as I wasn’t raised in a misogynistic household with strict gender ideals (or the Daddy figure  who would have imparted them onto me, according to Solanas). As a child, I based my beliefs about the differences between boys and girls on my peers, and came out of it with an almost inverted perspective on men and women at an early age that has stuck with me.  My stereotypical ideals were that women are strong, intelligent, and successful, while men are typically passive, insecure losers. This reading weirdly validated my childhood experience and subsequent conundrum when contending with what traditional gender stereotypes actually are later in life.

All in all, strange little text by a fascinating Butch. I derive the most enjoyment by looking at it as weirdly prescient satire by an early queer figure than as the actual manifesto of a mentally ill woman. 

that’s groovy mother right here
dark funny fast-paced

Had to read obv, that’s my cousin