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- Newsgroups: alt.vampyres
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!sdd.hp.com!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!torn!csd.unb.ca!mta.ca!FLINDHOLM
- From: flindholm@mta.ca
- Subject: Re: vampyre girls
- Message-ID: <1992Nov23.175454.26577@jupiter.sun.csd.unb.ca>
- Sender: news@jupiter.sun.csd.unb.ca
- Reply-To: flindholm@mta.ca
- Organization: Mount Allison U, Sackville, N.B. Canada
- References: <1992Nov21.005653.8526@csd.uwe.ac.uk>,<By5688.Cp6@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>
- Date: Mon, 23 Nov 1992 17:54:54 GMT
- Lines: 20
-
- In article <By5688.Cp6@mentor.cc.purdue.edu>, branwen@sage.cc.purdue.edu ( ) writes:
- > I didn't really mean to jump on the bandwagon here, but the question
- >begs the answer. Women vampires, as creatures of fantasy, are subject to
- >portrayal only in the form that the male fantasizers choose to give them.
- >For a woman to be portrayed as anything other than an ugly hag, she must be
- >given the opposite extreme. There is no such thing as a plain, unimpressive
- >and unassuming woman in fantasy. Where a woman begins as such, she is
- >invariably transformed into an object of great (formerly undiscovered)
- >beauty.
- > As far as why you don't see any "women like that around here" the
- >answer is equally simple. Women like that don't spend a lot of time in the
- >computer lab. They have dates.
- > Karen
-
- The guy who originaly posted had best not be a vampire or this message alone
- will turn him into a smoking pile of ash.
- Cyrus
-
-
- >
-