
1849 (quoted in Pathologies of Power, by Paul Farmer, page 323).
To-Day magazine, October issue ‘No Misogyny But True Equality’ http://historyoffeminism.com/ernest-belfort-bax-no-misogyny-but-true-equality-1887-complete/
‘No Misogyny But True Equality’ (1887)
1849 (quoted in Pathologies of Power, by Paul Farmer, page 323).
“It defaces every type of mental activity — history, art, politics, science and social reform.”
Race: A Study in Modern Superstition (1937)
Context: In seventeenth- and eighteenth-century France, race was already a weapon in the struggle between absolutism, aristocracy, and the middle class. The warfare spread to the arts and philosophy in the nineteenth century, by which time independent shoots in other cultures had also borne fruit, leaving the grand harvesting on a world-wide scale to our generation.
Viewed in the light of such facts, the race question appears a much bigger affair than a trumped-up excuse for local persecution. It becomes rather a mode of thought endemic in Western civilization. It defaces every type of mental activity — history, art, politics, science and social reform.
“Writing is all a lottery -- I have been a loser by the works of the greatest men of the age.”
The Expedition of Humphry Clinker (1771).
Defying the Tomb: Selected Prison Writings and Art of Kevin Rashid Johnson (2010)