While critics on The StoryGraph have called her theories "intentionally contrary" or based on "bunk science," others find her prose "electrifying" and her defense of male creative legacy refreshing. Paglia identifies as a , placing freedom of thought above ideology, and her work continues to be a foundational, if polarizing, text for those studying the intersection of psychology, culture, and sexuality.
In the shadow of the 1990s, a 736-page tome titled Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson burst onto the academic scene like a dionysian storm. Its author, , set out to prove a provocative thesis: that beneath the thin veneer of Western civilization lies a dark, roiling ocean of primal nature that Christianity never truly tamed. The War of the Gods Sexual Personae
: This is the "female" force of nature—chaos, instinct, and the primal urges that civilization tries to suppress but can never fully extinguish. While critics on The StoryGraph have called her