Edmund Cooper: Difference between revisions

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==Further reading==
==Further reading==
* [http://silk-noir.livejournal.com/99300.html?thread=739044#t739044 quote from interview] and discussion
* [http://www.asimovs.com/discus/messages/4134/7140.html?1181889315 quote from interview & discussion] on [[Asimov's Message Board]]; see also discussion at [http://silk-noir.livejournal.com/99300.html?thread=739044#t739044 silk-noir]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Cooper wikipedia entry on Edmund Cooper]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Edmund_Cooper wikipedia entry on Edmund Cooper]
* [http://www.stoke5399.freeserve.co.uk/cooper/ Edmund Cooper web-published biography]  
* [http://www.stoke5399.freeserve.co.uk/cooper/ Edmund Cooper web-published biography]  

Revision as of 05:35, 15 June 2007

Edmund Cooper was a SF writer; several of his novels were notably misogynistic and specifically anti-feminist, and a 1973 interview with him revealed concordant opinions.

Names

  • Martin Lester
  • George Kinley
  • Broderick Quain
  • Richard Avery

Further reading

Works of particular note

  • Who Needs Men? (aka Gender Genocide) (1973) - His clearest exposition of misogyny and anti-feminism; a typical anti-feminist backlash novel
  • The Slaves of Heaven (1974) - typical of his novels; a lone hero and stupid, repulsive women. Earth women forced to be birth surrogates for other women.