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7/9/2017 Kate Millett obituary | World news | The Guardian

Kate Millett obituary


Radical feminist writer best known for her pioneering 1970 book Sexual Politics

Julie Bindel
Thursday 7 September 2017 17.17BST

Kate Millett, author of the groundbreaking bestseller Sexual Politics, was the feminist who
launched the second wave of the womens liberation movement. Millett, who has died aged 82,
developed the theory that for women, the personal is political.

The basis of Sexual Politics (1970) was an analysis of patriarchal power. Millett developed the
notion that men have institutionalised power over women, and that this power is socially
constructed as opposed to biological or innate. This theory was the foundation for a new
approach to feminist thinking that became known as radical feminism.

Sexual Politics was published at the time of an emerging womens liberation movement, and an
emerging politics that began to dene male dominance as a political and institutional form of
oppression. Milletts work articulated this theory to the wider world, and in particular to the
intellectual liberal establishment, thereby launching radical feminism as a signicant new
political theory and movement.

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7/9/2017 Kate Millett obituary | World news | The Guardian

In her book, Millett explained womens complicity in male domination by analysing the way in
which females are socialised into accepting patriarchal values and norms, which challenged the
notion that female subservience is somehow natural.

Sex is deep at the heart of our troubles wrote Millett, and unless we eliminate the most
pernicious of our systems of oppression, unless we go to the very centre of the sexual politic and
its sick delirium of power and violence, all our eorts at liberation will only land us again in the
same primordial stews.

Sexual Politics includes sex scenes by three leading male writers: Henry Miller, Norman Mailer
and DH Lawrence. Millett analysed the subjugation of women in each. These writers were key
gures in the progressive literary scene. Each had a huge inuence on the counterculture politics
of the time, and embedded the notion that female sexual subordination and male dominance was
somehow sexy. Mailer, darling of the liberal left, responded with an article in Harpers
magazine in which he viciously attacked Milletts theories.

And the well-respected critic Irving Howe wrote that Sexual Politics was a farrago of blunders,
distortions, vulgarities and plain nonsense, and its author guilty of historical reductionism,
crude simplication, middle-class parochialism, methodological sloppiness, arrogant
ultimatism and comic ignorance.

It was never the intention of Millett to become a career feminist, being much more interested in
her art, as a sculptor. But after being featured on the cover of Time magazine, in August 1970, she
was catapulted into fame, which led to a backlash from some feminists who accused Millett of
styling herself as a movement leader an accusation she rejected.

That December, Time outed Millett as bisexual, and claimed that [the] disclosure is bound to
discredit her as a spokeswoman for her cause, cast further doubt on her theories, and reinforce
the views of those sceptics who routinely dismiss all liberationists as lesbians.

At the time the womens movement was divided over the issue of lesbianism Betty Friedan,
author of The Feminine Mystique (1963), had labelled lesbians the lavender menace and
many liberal feminists turned against Millett. Yet more than three decades later, the feminist
writer Andrea Dworkin wrote of Millett: Betty Friedan had written about the problem that had
no name. Kate Millett named it, illustrated it, exposed it, analysed it.

Born in St Paul, Minnesota, Kate was raised by strict Catholic parents. Her mother, Helen (nee
Feely), worked as a teacher and an insurance saleswoman to support her three daughters after her
alcoholic husband, James, an engineer, abandoned the family when Kate was 14. Millett went to
the University of Minnesota, graduating in English literature in 1956, and then to St Hildas
College, Oxford. She taught briey at the University of North Carolina before focusing on
sculpture in Japan and then New York. In 1965, she married the Japanese sculptor Fumio
Yoshimura. During their open relationship, Millett had sexual relationships with a number of
women.

She went to Columbia University in 1968, and Sexual Politics, based on her doctorate, was
published in 1970. At the time, Millett was living as an impoverished hippy in the Bowery district.
She wrote about the impact of her newfound fame in Flying (1974) and followed this up with Sita
(1976), about her relationship with an older woman. In 1979, she travelled to Irans rst

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7/9/2017 Kate Millett obituary | World news | The Guardian

International Womens Day with her then partner, Sophie Keir, a photojournalist. They were
arrested and expelled, an experience they documented in their book Going to Iran (1981).

Millett had been committed to mental health institutions by her family on various occasions and
she became an activist in the anti-psychiatry movement. She wrote about her experiences in The
Loony-Bin Trip (1990). She also wrote The Politics of Cruelty (1994), in which she railed against
the use of torture, and Mother Millett (2001), about her relationship with her mother.

In 1998 Millett wrote a piece for the Guardian, The Feminist Time Forgot, in which she said: I
have no saleable skill, for all my supposed accomplishments. I am unemployable. Frightening,
this future. What poverty ahead, what mortication, what distant bag-lady horrors, when my
savings are gone?

I had met Millett the year before, when visiting Dworkin in New York. Millett was shy and warm,
and not the angry, self-pitying person I had been warned about. She was preoccupied, however,
with what she perceived to be the wealth held by other feminists, in particular those who had not
contributed to the movement in any original way. Dworkin later told me Millett had lambasted
her for owning a brownstone in Brooklyn, for no apparent reason other than she was unhappy
with her lot.

In her later years, Millett and Keir lived on a farm in Poughkeepsie, New York state, where at rst
they sold Christmas trees, and later established a womens art colony. In 2012 she received the
Yoko Ono Lennon Courage award for the arts, and in 2013 she was inducted into the National
Womens Hall of Fame in New York.

Milletts marriage to Yoshimura ended in 1985. She is survived by Keir, whom she married in later
life. Katherine Murray Millett, feminist writer, activist and sculptor, born 14 September 1934;

died 6September 2017

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