![]() ![]() Just why not? I’m nothing if not ambitious. So in the show, you know, let’s talk about different cultures, different continents, different experiences of sex and gender, and get into it all. Naomi Alderman, a powerful editor five-thousand years in the future, evaluates Neil Armon’s novel. Surely a kinder, more caring anddare I saymore sexy world than the one we live in. It’s a novel and a show that is trying to talk about the variety of experiences around gender around sex in the world,” she explains. I think I’d rather enjoy this ‘world run by men’ you’ve been talking about. ![]() “I’m a trans-inclusive feminist, so these questions are important to me. Some of the most poignant are around sex and gender. But I certainly do have some good questions,” she says. “It is weird for anybody, particularly me, to pretend that you have all the answers. PRIDE Interviews ‘The Power’ Author & Excecutive Producers Naomi Alderman & Tim … ![]() The book was inspired by Alderman’s time writing alongside Margaret Atwood, the Canadian author responsible for some of the most genre-defining literature of the. The novel was published in 2016 and sits firmly in the genre of feminist dystopia. Watch PRIDE’s full Interview with The Power author and executive producers Naomi Alderman & Tim Bricknell below. Without a doubt, Naomi Alderman’s best-known book is The Power. The show doesn’t shy away from asking the biggest of questions, which is exactly what Alderman set out to do. What follows is a fascinating and complex look at how that upends not only who has the power, but all the social and cultural structures that have been in place bolstering patriarchal systems around the globe. ![]()
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