tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4519141181875256743.post2610860805041721073..comments2024-01-27T04:08:17.460+11:00Comments on Capital Idea: Review: Save for CryingBorn Dancin'http://www.blogger.com/profile/14526760383290674186noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4519141181875256743.post-54936559008615646272011-03-03T14:39:01.669+11:002011-03-03T14:39:01.669+11:00Good point, and I kind of thought of a bunch of co...Good point, and I kind of thought of a bunch of counter-examples as soon as I typed that but didn't want to wander off too much. I was thinking about a certain stream of writing that characterises the crowd and modern life as emasculating, and pits the man apart as a kind of last bastion of masculinity. But I think that's a whole other problem in itself.Born Dancin'https://www.blogger.com/profile/14526760383290674186noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4519141181875256743.post-66312377354083784322011-03-03T13:46:56.863+11:002011-03-03T13:46:56.863+11:00JB, I'm sure we'll discuss the show itself...JB, I'm sure we'll discuss the show itself at length anon, but I'd argue that a great deal of modern literature with a female protagonist also positions her as an outsider to the mainstream male discourse. The reason for outsiderness is different but the otherness is just the same.CNPnoreply@blogger.com