Dune Bene Gesserit | A Feminist Manifesto Exposed
Dune is both a feminist manifesto and a Red Pill exposure of the feminine. Plus the novel also revels the feminist role in the new world order.
Hello and welcome to the Ancient wisdom modern mind podcast and today I will give a critique of the novel ‘Dune”, and I will show how Dune is both a feminist manifesto and a Red Pill exposure of the feminine. Plus how the novel also revels the feminist role in the new world order
The Bene Gesserit are a pseudo religious organization of all female spies, nuns, scientists, and theologians who use genetic experimentation, galactic political interference, and religious engineering to advance their own agenda of ascending the human race with the arrival of their chosen one, the Kwisatz Haderach.
The 1965 release of Frank Herbert's Dune exposes the collaboration of female Marxists and technocratic businesses. Using the science fiction genre, Frank Herbert reveals their strategy for establishing a new global order. And Dune clearly articulates the feminists' position in this new world order, as well as how deeply ingrained the feminists are in the corporate legal structures.
Women have been, and continue to be, depicted as the victim, with males competing for the most attractive women as if they were commodities. Even when a film claims to give strong female role models, they are all too often characterized as a victim who is suddenly bestowed with supernatural power without any work or moral fortitude. But, in Dune, Frank Herbert scrapes down the curtain to reveal that the ultimate power is feminine, shown via manipulation of religion, societal norms, and mate selection.
Dune also reveals the correct place of men in the social structure as that of a blunt tool, a weapon that is used by the feminine to control and structure power, yet it also points out the fear that women have if they lost control of this male weapon.
The novel 'Dune' is very much both a feminist manifesto that clearly directs women to the power they seek without the need for the deception of playing the victim card, and yet it also exposes female nature in all its subtlety and accurately gives society a Red Pilled look into the nature of the matriarchy.
Please watch the video till end and if you have the time then let me know in the comments about your understanding of Dune and how it reflects human society or not if that’s what you think.
If this critique interests you and you would like clarification, then please listen to the podcast until the end and you can ask me questions in the comments.
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References
// IMAGE S O U R C E: Image is used under the fair use and other exceptions to copyright law
Emilia Clarke from Game of Thrones | Image by: Medusawink.
Background by Roger Sexton from Pixabay