Tag Archives: being well-known
“Selling Yourself”
“Selling Yourself” Where I come from, there was another name for women who did that, and it wasn’t “sex worker.” Although writing Confessions of a Young Philosopher sometimes felt like being crucified near an ant hill – compared to marketing, … Continue reading
Posted in Absurdism, Academe, Action, Alienation, American Politics, Anthropology, Art, Art of Living, Autonomy, beauty, conformism, Contemplation, Contradictions, Cool, Courage, Courtship, Cultural Politics, Culture, Desire, dialectic, Erotic Life, exploitation, Faith, Fashion, Femininity, Feminism, Freedom, Friendship, Gender Balance, glitterati, Guilt and Innocence, Heroes, history of ideas, Idealism, Ideality, Identity, Idolatry, Immorality, Immortality, Institutional Power, Journalism, Legal Responsibility, life and death struggle, Literature, Love, Male Power, Memoir, memory, Mind Control, Moral action, Moral evaluation, nineteenth-century, Oppression, Past and Future, Philosophy, Political, Political Movements, politics, post modernism, Power, presence, promissory notes, Propaganda, Psychology, public facade, Public Intellectual, relationships, Roles, Seduction, self-deception, Sex Appeal, social climbing, social construction, Social Conventions, social ranking, spiritual journey, spiritual not religious, Spirituality, status, status of women, Suffering, Terror, The Examined Life, The Problematic of Woman, the profane, the sacred, Time, twentieth century, twenty-first century, victims, Work, Writing, Zeitgeist
Tagged art of invisibility, author, being an influence, being influenced, being unmasked, being well-known, Bronte parsonage, composing v selling, Confessions of a Young Philosopher, cultural influence, Currer Ellis and Acton Bell, George Eliot, George Sand, getting an agent, getting published, getting read, hiding, hiding one's light, hiding your light under a bushel, influence, influencer, Jane Austen, life lessons, literary fame, London publisher, male pseudonyms, opinion shaping, Plato's Phaedrus, publicity, self-concealment, sensitivity, shyness, social invisibility, the Bronte Sisters, thin skin, wanting to hide, wearing a mask, wearing armor, writer as politician, writers and readers
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