Neith Boyce Quote
What women are concerned in is developing their own individuality, and hence they refuse to call any man master, be he husband or spiritual guide. Personal freedom is more precious to them than the protection of the best men. The women they envy are not those who are simply wives and mothers, but those who by honest intelligent work have attained distinction in any line of effort, and whose creed has been self-reliance.
Neith Boyce
What women are concerned in is developing their own individuality, and hence they refuse to call any man master, be he husband or spiritual guide. Personal freedom is more precious to them than the protection of the best men. The women they envy are not those who are simply wives and mothers, but those who by honest intelligent work have attained distinction in any line of effort, and whose creed has been self-reliance.
Related Quotes
Zeena Schreck is a Berlin-based interdisciplinary artist, author, musician/composer, tantric teacher, mystic, animal rights activist, and counter-culture icon known by her mononymous artist name, ZEEN...
Zeena Schreck
Tags:
animal activism, animal liberation, animal rights, animals, animism, art, artist, artists, bhakti, composers
The material world is all feminine. The feminine engergy makes the non-manifest, manifest. So even men (are of the feminine energy). We have to relinquish our ideas of gender in the conventional sense...
Zeena Schreck
Tags:
animism, autonomy, bhakti, dissident, ecstasy, female, feminine principle, freedom, gender, gender stereotypes
There are Tantrics who deliberately seek to do more active forms of renunciation, so transgression of social norms and breaking of taboo, and breaking of social taboos especially, is a form of renunci...
Zeena Schreck
Tags:
animism, autonomy, bhakti, dissident, ecstasy, female, freedom, independence, initiation, inspiration
A unifying factor between the different traditions and lineages of Tantra, is that it is feminine in nature. It acknowledges the feminine as the basis from which all the practices spring. Therefore, T...
Zeena Schreck
Tags:
animism, autonomy, bhakti, dissident, ecstasy, female, feminine principle, freedom, independence, initiation
There are Tantrics who deliberately break taboos and social norms and then there are other Tantrics who, by means of their practices and the way that they practice, that to society in general, it may...
Zeena Schreck
Tags:
animism, artists, autonomy, bhakti, dissident, ecstasy, freedom, independence, initiation, inspiration
In order to understand why one chooses to be a Tantric practitioner, there has to be an understanding of cause and effect, cyclic existence, the awareness that the reality that we think we are seeing...
Zeena Schreck
Tags:
autonomy, bhakti, disillusionment, dissident, freedom, illusion, independence, initiation, inspiration, jivanmukti
About Neith Boyce
Neith Boyce (March 21, 1872 – December 2, 1951) was an American script writer and theatre manager. Much of Boyce’s earlier work was published with help from her parents, Mary and Henry Harrison Boyce. Neith Boyce later co-founded the Provincetown Players alongside Susan Glaspell, George Cram Cook, her own husband Hutchins Hapgood, and others. Boyce worked with the Provincetown Players in several capacities that included directing, performing, hosting productions in her home, and having all four of her plays produced. Boyce’s plays featured plots that focused on women’s sexuality, personal relationships, and agency.