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Peggy Sastre (born 1981) is a French science journalist, translator, blogger and essayist. She is a Doctor of Philosophy[1] who worked on Nietzsche and Darwin.
Peggy Sastre | |
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Occupation | Journalist |
She forms the concept of “evofeminism”, offering a biological and evolutionary reading of sexual and gender issues.[2]
Sastre was one of the authors along with Abnousse Shalmani of the open letter criticising #MeToo sent to the leading French newspaper, Le Monde, signed by over 100 high-profile French women. The letter advocated in part that a "freedom to bother" — a man's right to make a pass at a woman, even if a clumsy one — was "indispensable to sexual freedom".[3]
Publications
edit- No Sex, avoir envie de ne pas faire l'amour, Éditions La Musardine, Paris, 2010 ISBN 978-2842713928
References
edit- ^ "Peggy Sastre , Généalogies de la morale : perspectives nietzschéenne et darwinienne sur l'origine des comportements et des sentiments moraux". theses.fr. Retrieved 2018-11-05.
- ^ Ballast (2020-09-29). "BALLAST • L'évopsy, une « science » antiféministe". BALLAST (in French). Retrieved 2021-11-19.
- ^ Annabel Crabb. "The #MeToo movement took the world by storm. Then it met the French resistance". ABC News Online. Retrieved 2018-09-04.