The Monstrous Regiment of Women

The Monstrous Regiment of Women is an anti-abortion, anti-feminist propaganda film produced by the Gunn Brothers, featuring fact-free and fecklessly unattributable interviews with pregnant women and women who wish they were pregnant, railing against women who aren't, including Model Homemaker Phyllis Schlafly and other women of the religious right.

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History

The film is named after Calvinist preacher John Knox's misogynistic screed, The First Blast of the Trumpet Against the Monstrous Regiment of Women (1558), which was largely an attack on the Catholic queens of England and Scotland of the time; his political strategy of attacking all women backfired against Knox when a Protestant woman inherited the English throne. Terry Pratchett's satirical fantasy novel, Monstrous Regiment, is also named after Knox's screed but is deliberately funny.

Central themes of the film

Single-parent households are described as dens of effeminacy. Scary pictures of so-called feminist icons are shown along with ominous background music. One woman claims that her former role in sex education had the intended purpose of increasing teenage pregnancy and abortion rates.

Mrs. Schlafly practices a form of neuro-linguistic programming ethics-free rhetoric hate-filled and hypocritical boosterism, but her hair looks nice firm and buttery.

Critical reaction

The film was almost entirely ignored by critics. A user on Feministing's community pages praised it highly for comedy value:

My favourite parts have to be the cartoon feminists with the speech bubbles saying “nag, whinge, accuse” over their heads as cartoon bags of money pile at their feet, and also the woman who claims to have been an abortionist bent on becoming a millionaire by going to schools and making girls sexually active by giving them faulty pills so they’d “have three to five abortions before they turned 18″.
—Nettle-Syrup on Feministing [1]

Website Ladies Against Feminism apparently took seriously its exposure of the "deliberate strategies, carefully planned efforts, and absolute, complete selfishness of" feminism and egalitarianism, but found the images of feticide a bit much for the delicate and young.[2]

gollark: Well, in apiary engines less advanced than ours, bees have to leave.
gollark: I don't run on them any more.
gollark: No, that's one of our older computers.
gollark: Wow, that'll definitely work.
gollark: There are uncountably infinitely many, so assuming a finite, nonzero sale price for each, I'll have uncountably infinite money.

See also

References

  1. The Monstrous Regiment of Women, Nettle-Syrup, Feministing Community, 3 March 2010
  2. Review: The Monstrous Regiment of Women, Jennifer McBride, Ladies Against Feminism, March 7, 2015
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