Fuck-me shoes

[2] Tight trousers were called "come fuck-me's" as listed in a 1972 British dictionary of slang (The Queens' Vernacular: A Gay Lexicon), while a 1974 book (Myra & Gore: A New View of Myra Breckinridge and A Candid Interview with Gore Vidal: A Book for Vidalophiles) is cited as making a reference to a person wearing "a pair of fabulous 1940s-Joan Crawford-fuck-me's".

[2] Greer used the term in referring to fellow Guardian columnist Suzanne Moore as having "hair bird's-nested all over the place, fuck-me shoes and three fat inches of cleavage".

Greer was also quoted during the 1990s as criticizing a number of women writers that she termed "lifestyle feminists"[14] who were, in her view, espousing feminism at nothing more than a superficial level.

[16] Moore has said her footwear is "not worn just for the benefit of men", implying that the intention is twofold, to please both her and observers, although she also says "Most of the pleasure [of buying shoes] involves a private fantasy that starts with me and ends at my feet.

[citation needed] In January 2011, in a forum with teenaged students in Cartagena, Colombia, Greer noticed the popularity of silicone breast implants in the audience.

When punk fashion was on the rise during the late 1970s, young women consciously played with the symbolism inherent in their accessorizing, mixing choices that created a jarring visual clash; leather was combined with lace, steel spikes with velvet, stiletto heels with heavy ankle chains.

High-heel shoes worn in an overt sexual context