Occult Feminism: The Secret History of Women's Liberation (Unabridged)
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- $17.99
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- $17.99
Publisher Description
Occult Feminism: The Secret History of Women's Liberation dives deep into the occult roots of the movement, detailing the lives of some of its most prominent figures and the esoteric beliefs that inspired and motivated them. Since the 1970s, everything we learn about the history of the women's movement has been subject to gatekeeping by radicals who run women's studies departments in universities. But there's an entire history that has been obscured from public view. Rachel Wilson brings this history to life, filled with incredible true stories of demon worship, spirit mediums, magic mushrooms, witchcraft, CIA spies, and sex cults--there's nothing boring about the real history of feminism, and it's all here.
In modern society, it is simply assumed that women’s liberation was a good thing. But what if it was never an organic, grassroots movement for social justice? Did feminism liberate women from an oppressive, evil patriarchy? Or did it rip away the fundamental structures that afforded them stability, security, and purpose, turning them into wage slaves for corporations and tax revenue cash cows for governments? What if feminism left women more vulnerable than ever by destroying the family? What if it's a cunning deception that has tricked women into abandoning their God-given identity to serve a new world order and one of the oldest belief systems in the world?
People deserve to know the whole story about the biggest social revolution of all time. A revolution that left no aspect of modern life unaffected and claims to be for the good of women everywhere. This must-listen book goes beyond the propaganda to deliver the fascinating truth.
Customer Reviews
I didn’t like it
The title looked interesting and I didn’t completely disagree with your opinions but this isn’t a good book. I’d prefer it if you defined the occult and used more facts. This books feels like more opinions and personal experience are used than facts. You did talk about the history of witchcraft and the occult. You brought up Margaret Sanger but after hearing this book I’m not convinced that the occult has any connection to feminism. There’s too many ideas being implied here and not enough blunt facts.