Feminism Unmodified: Discourses on Life and Law is a 1987 book by feminist legal scholar Catharine A.
[1] The book is a collection of essays by MacKinnon delivered during the 1980s, in which she makes a radical feminist critique of pornography and liberal feminism.
Apart from the introduction ("The Art of the Impossible") and afterword, the text is divided into three sections, each with five or six subsections:[2] MacKinnon has received criticism from some other feminist scholars, including Nadine Strossen and Aya Gruber, since the publication of Feminism Unmodified.
She frames MacKinnon's core argument as one that favors censorship, which Strossen believes "would undermine women's rights and interests."
In 2009, Aya Gruber, another feminist legal scholar, published "Rape, Feminism, and the War on Crime" in Washington Law Review.