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Come Up and See Me Sometime: Mae West and the Making of a Feminist Icon

Come Up and See Me Sometime: Mae West and the Making of a Feminist Icon

Before Madonna struck a pose, Mae West struck a match.

She was the original provocateur — arrested for writing about sex, banned from Broadway for celebrating desire, and censored by Hollywood for refusing to play nice. Yet through wit, glamour, and sheer audacity, she rewrote the rules of womanhood on screen and off.

Come Up and See Me Sometime: Mae West and the Making of a Feminist Icon traces how one woman’s defiance shaped modern feminism, queer aesthetics, and the art of female self-invention.

Gaslighting: Why a 1944 Film Still Holds the Truth About One of the Most Insidious Forms of Abuse

Gaslighting: Why a 1944 Film Still Holds the Truth About One of the Most Insidious Forms of Abuse

Gaslighting is everywhere. In therapy sessions. On TikTok. In political debates. In messy breakups posted online. But most people using the word have never seen where it came from—or felt the raw weight of its original meaning.

The term didn’t come from a psychology manual. It came from a story. A 1944 film called Gaslight. In it, a husband methodically convinces his wife she’s losing her mind—moving objects, dimming the lights, and denying reality until she doubts everything she knows.

Watching the film is like stepping into the suffocation itself. You feel the erosion of confidence, the rewriting of truth, the calculated isolation. It’s not just a plot—it’s the anatomy of abuse.

Before we dilute gaslighting into a buzzword, we owe it to ourselves—and to survivors—to go back to where it began.

Must-Watch Films Set in Apartheid South Africa

Seven Must-Watch Films Set in Apartheid South Africa

Films about Apartheid South Africa serve as crucial historical records, illustrating the struggle against racial injustice and educating audiences about systemic oppression. They portray individual bravery and collective resistance, igniting empathy and activism for contemporary human rights issues. These cinematic works emphasize the ongoing relevance of past struggles in today’s global context.

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