immasculate

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English

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Etymology

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The verb was coined by Judith Fetterley in 1978; compare effeminate (verb); contrast emasculate.[1]

Verb

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immasculate (third-person singular simple present immasculates, present participle immasculating, simple past and past participle immasculated)

  1. (transitive, especially of a woman) To make into a man; to make manly, or cause to have a male perspective.
    • 1990, Gayle Austin, Feminist Theories for Dramatic Criticism, University of Michigan Press, →ISBN, page 37:
      A larger number of plays than novels seem not to immasculate the female reader in the precise way Fetterley articulates. After having made my choices, I realized that the male-written plays analyzed in this book are all written by heterosexual-identified playwrights []
    • 2007 May 14, J. Foertsch, Conflict and Counterpoint in Lesbian, Gay, and Feminist Studies, Springer, →ISBN, page 90:
      His seminal readings of eighteenth-century all-male environments such as prisons and boys' schools have tended to "immasculate" the asylum, the clinic, and the confessional as well. Related is the question of whether this de fact androcentrism derives from something subversively queer or discouragingly traditional (i.e., misogynist) in Foucault or []
    • 2013 November 5, Miriam Catterall, Pauline Maclaran, Lorna Stevens, Marketing and Feminism: Current issues and research, Routledge, →ISBN, page 61:
      .The concept of 'reading as a woman' (Culler 1982) permits entry into women-centred text that, unlike male-centred mainstream works, does not immasculate women.
    • 2016 November 11, Susan L. Smith, The Power of Women: A "Topos" in Medieval Art and Literature, University of Pennsylvania Press, →ISBN, page 25:
      By definition, she [a female reader] cannot resist this danger as herself, as a woman, because as a creature of the flesh she is the danger, but only by renouncing her nature as a woman, remaining a virgin, and identifying herself with male spirit. Such a woman, according to Saint Jerome, is virile in her virtue, as good as a man. If the Power of Women topos in "Ad Virgines" addresses women at all, it appeals to their potential to identify with men and as men, to "immasculate” themselves, in Judith Fetterley's term.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Barbara E. Reid, OP, Shelly Matthews (2021 April 15) Wisdom Commentary: Luke 10-24, Liturgical Press, →ISBN, page 442:"immasculate" was coined by Judith Fet[t]erley, The Resisting Reader: A Feminist Approach to American Fiction (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1978).