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  5. The Lord Of The Rings Trilogy

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Germaine Greer

Submitted by meelalala on August 19, 2007

Category: English
Words: 1227 | Pages: 5
Views: 188
Popularity Rank: 64,817
Average Member Grade: N/A (Add a Comment / Grade this Paper)

Germaine Greer is widely regarded as the most significant and famous soldiers of gender war in the Twentieth century. This amazing Australian academic, writer and broadcaster was born on January 29, 1939.

Germaine Greer grew up in the bayside suburb of Mentone in Melbourne. After attending a convent, Star of the Sea College, in Gardenvale, Melbourne, she won a teaching scholarship in 1959. Germaine Greer then enrolled at the University of Melbourne, where she earned her nickname Germaine Queer and gradated with a B.A Honours in 1959. She then moved to Sydney, where she became involved with the Sydney Push, a group of intellectual left-wing anarchists who practiced non-monogamy. The writer describes Greer at the time:
"For Germaine, [the Push] provided a philosophy to underpin the attitude and lifestyle she had already acquired in Melbourne. She walked into the Royal George Hotel, into the throng talking themselves hoarse in a room stinking of stale beer and thick with cigarette smoke, and set out to follow the Push way of life — 'an intolerably difficult discipline which I forced myself to learn'. The Push struck her as completely different from the Melbourne intelligentsia she had engaged with in the Drift, 'who always talked about art and truth and beauty and argument ad hominem; instead, these people talked about truth and only truth, insisting that most of what we were exposed to during the day was ideology, which was a synonym for lies — or bullshit, as they called it.' Her Damascus turned out to be the Royal George, and the Hume Highway was the road to it. 'I was already an anarchist,' she says. 'I just didn't know why I was an anarchist. They put me in touch with the basic texts and I found out what the internal logic was about how I felt and thought' (Wallace 1997)."

Germaine Greer, while in Sydney, she lectured at the University of Sydney, she received a M.A in 1963 for a thesis on Byron. A year later, the thesis...

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