Abstract

����� ��� Far off, in a hidden plateau of the Andes, three explorers uncovered a verdant and peaceful land populated and ruled by a lost race of white women. The year before, two inventors drilled into the Earth’s crust and discovered a primeval world in its hollow core. This was a brutal land baked by a permanent noon-day sun and populated by savage humans and wrathful prehistoric beasts and ruled by an advanced race of female reptiles. The white women of Herland, the utopia described by Charlotte Perkins Gilman in her 1915 novel of the same name, and the reptiles of Pellucidar, the dystopia of Edgar Rice Burroughs’ 1914 At the Earth’s Core, had evolved to breed without men. Herland’s children were born through parthenogenesis. Pellucidar’s reptiles had discovered a secret formula to fertilize their own eggs. Through accidents of evolution, they had come to rule over women’s lands. 1

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