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Feminist Theory

$7.99

When a vindictive student discovers her wife's hidden past, feminist professor Elise Marlowe faces an impossible choice: submit to his escalating sexual demands or watch everything she loves be destroyed.

Length
153 Pages | 72,000 Words
Formats
PDF, ePub, Mobi, Word

Dr. Elise Marlowe has built her career on feminist principles and her life around her loving marriage to Maya. When a vindictive student discovers a secret that could destroy her wife's career, Elise faces an impossible choice. What begins as a single horrific violation quickly evolves into an escalating nightmare of blackmail and sexual degradation, and Elise finds herself trapped in an inescapable web of compliance and shame. With her professional reputation, her marriage, and her very sense of self under relentless attack, Elise must navigate the brutal reality that her attempts to shield the woman she loves may ultimately cost her everything—including her humanity.


For readers who enjoy dark, cruel erotica that is light on force and heavy on psychological manipulation.


The story has two endings. One of them will remain exclusive to the ebook.


Content Warnings:

  • Rape (Strong) — The story contains multiple explicit, graphic scenes of non-consensual sexual assault, including anal, oral, and vaginal rape. These assaults are described in detail and form the central narrative of the story.

  • Orientation Play (Strong) — Contains scenes of lesbian women being raped by men, and being specifically mocked about it. 

Major Themes:

  • Loss of Identity — The methodical erasure of Elise's professional, personal, and sexual identity through sustained psychological and physical abuse.

  • Progressive Complicity — The gradual transformation from victim to unwilling participant as blackmail forces Elise to do more and more. 

  • Blackmail — The story examines how helpless someone is under the threat of blackmail, and how compliance  often only makes it worse.

  • Destruction of Feminist Ideals and Orientation Play — The deliberate targeting and dismantling of Elise's feminist principles and lesbian identity through personalized trauma.

  • The Price of Protection — The examination of what someone will sacrifice to protect a loved one, and at what point that protection becomes meaningless when the protector is completely destroyed.

Fetish and Kink Tags: 

  • Blackmail/Coercion (Strong) — The entire narrative is driven by blackmail, with the protagonist forced to comply with increasingly degrading demands to protect her wife's career and reputation.

  • Humiliation and Degradation (Strong) — Extensive verbal, psychological, and physical humiliation, including forced public degradation, body writing with degrading words, and being made to beg for sexual acts.

  • Body Modification (Strong) — Forced breast enlargement surgery is depicted, with the protagonist coerced into permanently altering her body against her will.

  • Lesbian Subjugation (Strong) — Specific targeting of a lesbian character for heterosexual rape as a form of "correction" or punishment, with explicit homophobic language and attitudes.

  • Voyeurism/Recording/Forced Pornography (Strong) — Non-consensual filming of sexual acts for blackmail purposes, with the threat and eventual release of these recordings as pornography.

  • Public Humiliation (Moderate) — Contains scenes of sexual torture in semi-public settings, including classroom environments and other places where discovery is possible, though they are not the main focus of the story.

  • Body Writing (Moderate) — Heavy description of writing of degrading words and phrases on the victim's body as a form of psychological domination and ownership, though they are not the main focus of the story.

  • Drugging (Strong) — Multiple instances of victims being drugged without consent, including the protagonist's wife and another student.

  • Sexual Servitude (Strong) — Progression toward complete sexual slavery and dehumanization.

Betrayal Brat Taming Corruption Dark Humiliation Lesbian victims Modern Multiple Endings Orientation Play Slavery
Reviews (3)
Rated 5 out of 5 stars.
5.0 | 2 Ratings

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Sinfulwords
May 02
Rated 5 out of 5 stars.

First and foremost wonderfully original plot. The characters are all so alive, multi-dimensional, and realistic in their own ways. The dialogue flows like butter and the majority of the prose is well constructed and paints a clear image of all actions and scenes.


With the first ending in mind, Ellie is a very strong protagonist, she’s likable, so, you empathize with her easily which makes the depravity of the subject matter hit all the more vigorously. With that said, at times she frustrated me. She was supposed to be a super smart professor, so, I couldn’t understand why she would continue to take all that abuse instead of confiding in Maya. Especially when breast surgery came into the picture. I understand she was being black mailed through her love of Maya but at the end of the day, Maya could’ve just gotten another job. The threat didn’t feel proportionate to the abuse at a certain point—and that point for me was surgery . Don’t get me wrong, I LOVED the depravity of it all, it just lacked realism for me after that point. It did NOT stop me from enjoying the story at all. Her downfall was exquisitely fun to read and I loved every single goddamn minute of it! If the phrase ‘how the mighty have fallen’ were a person it would be Professor Marlowe.


When you read the book with its first ending, Brandon comes off as one of the best villains I’ve ever read. He’s rivaled by only The Judge in Blood Meridian and that’s saying a lot. Lol, like Sauron and Voldemort can take a seat cause Brandon makes them look like something silly…like Lord Farquad from Shrek or something 😂 The way u made him so cheerful during all the abuse really made his sociopathy shine through. What a monster! He literally gave me chills. And the way he would not compromise with Ellie at all! He didn’t give a fuck, about any of that: his way or the highway! You did an amazing job writing him. My god! And then in that one scene with Rachel when he lets his chipper mask of nonchalance fall…damn! It really emphasized his anger and I was so scared about what was gonna happen to both women! so so sooooo good!


Now for my two cents about the endings. I liked the first ending for its pure evil, its depravity and the overall bravery that you, the author, showed by letting the villain win. Given the subject matter and the presumed clientele of your literature I can see why you wrote it that way…but ending #2 felt more believable to me.


Ending number two addressed the inconsistencies I felt about Ellie in the first ending’s version, it also gave me a sense of satisfaction as the reader because the protagonist got the last word. Like I said, u made Ellie a super likable and sympathetic character so I was rooting for her the entire time (no matter how delicious I found the scenes of her abuse), and when she fell so hard in the first ending, I felt not only sad, but a little robbed. So ending number two really smoothed all that out for me. Personally it is my preferred conclusion.


Overall I loved your story so much and I will be cruising your other books and definitely buying more. You’ve earned yourself a fan here! You’re an incredibly talented author and I love your twisted little mind. This will not be the last u hear from me!

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Replying to

Wow! Thank you so much for the in-depth review! I certainly hope this will not be the last I hear, since I'll be looking forward to comments like this!


I'm glad you enjoyed so much.

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Illicit Toast
Mar 31
Rated 5 out of 5 stars.

A great descent into depravity for a feminist professor and her young manosphere pupil. Worth a read!

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