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- Haec-Vir abstract "Haec-Vir (Latin: This [effeminate] Man - haec being the feminine form of the demonstrative pronoun jokingly applied to the masculine noun) was a pamphlet published in 1620 in England in response to the pamphlet Hic Mulier. Where Hic Mulier argued against transvestitism, and more broadly women's rights, Haec-Vir defended those women who did not fit their expected gender role. The pamphlet is designed as a dialogue between Hic Mulier (The Man-Woman, a female transvestite) and Haec-Vir (The Womanish Man, an effeminate man). The pamphlet is notable as an early expression of feminism in the Renaissance. It is noteworthy that Hic Mulier seems to abandon some of her previous ideals by stating that the only reason women are \"overstepping their bounds\" is because men have ceased to be \"real men.\"".
- Haec-Vir wikiPageExternalLink Haec_Vir_(1620).
- Haec-Vir wikiPageExternalLink Hic_Mulier_(1620).
- Haec-Vir wikiPageID "1459061".
- Haec-Vir wikiPageLength "4284".
- Haec-Vir wikiPageOutDegree "33".
- Haec-Vir wikiPageRevisionID "698985692".
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Book_of_Deuteronomy.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Category:1620_in_England.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Category:1620_works.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Category:17th_century_in_LGBT_history.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cross-dressing.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Category:Feminism_in_England.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Category:LGBT_history_in_England.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Category:Pamphlets.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Demonstrative.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Effeminacy.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Elizabeth_I_of_England.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink England.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Feminism.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Gender_role.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Grammatical_gender.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Hic_Mulier.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Ideal_(ethics).
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink James_VI_and_I.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Latin.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink List_of_transgender-related_topics.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Martial.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Mary_Frith.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Pamphlet.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Puritans.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Renaissance.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Thomas_Overbury.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Transvestism.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Virgil.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLink Womens_rights.
- Haec-Vir wikiPageWikiLinkText "Haec-Vir".
- Haec-Vir wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Italic_title.
- Haec-Vir subject Category:1620_in_England.
- Haec-Vir subject Category:1620_works.
- Haec-Vir subject Category:17th_century_in_LGBT_history.
- Haec-Vir subject Category:Cross-dressing.
- Haec-Vir subject Category:Feminism_in_England.
- Haec-Vir subject Category:LGBT_history_in_England.
- Haec-Vir subject Category:Pamphlets.
- Haec-Vir hypernym Pamphlet.
- Haec-Vir type Book.
- Haec-Vir type Work.
- Haec-Vir type Publication.
- Haec-Vir type Redirect.
- Haec-Vir type Work.
- Haec-Vir comment "Haec-Vir (Latin: This [effeminate] Man - haec being the feminine form of the demonstrative pronoun jokingly applied to the masculine noun) was a pamphlet published in 1620 in England in response to the pamphlet Hic Mulier. Where Hic Mulier argued against transvestitism, and more broadly women's rights, Haec-Vir defended those women who did not fit their expected gender role.".
- Haec-Vir label "Haec-Vir".
- Haec-Vir sameAs Q5638149.
- Haec-Vir sameAs m.0535z2.
- Haec-Vir sameAs Q5638149.
- Haec-Vir wasDerivedFrom Haec-Vir?oldid=698985692.
- Haec-Vir isPrimaryTopicOf Haec-Vir.