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She asked students why they thought women tennis players wore skirts, and asked why a young woman would choose to wear stiletto shoes: "So you think the shoes are her fetish? . In January 2011, in a forum with teenaged students in Cartagena, Colombia, Greer noticed the popularity of silicone breast implants in the audience. The expression was further popularized by the success of British jazz singer Amy Winehouse’s single "Pumps", originally listed as " Fuck Me Pumps" on her 2003 album Frank. She continues to use the phrase "fuck me shoes" in public speaking when discussing gender and clothing styles society deems appropriate. Greer had been denouncing stiletto shoes as symbols of women's subordination as early as 1971. The incident, and the term, received coverage in British media and beyond, and the term has become associated with Greer in popular culture. Moore's response to Greer was that her fashion choices were dictated by her own tastes and not to please men: "as someone who grew up with punk and Madonna, I take it for granted that women dress to please themselves and not men." 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 involves a private fantasy that begins with me and ends at my feet. Church-Gibson identifies Greer as a dominant player in defining an anti-fashion feminist rhetoric. Greer was also quoted during the 1990s as criticizing a number of women writers that she termed "lifestyle feminists" who were, in her view, espousing feminism at nothing more than a superficial level.
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Greer made the remark in response to a column Moore had written about Greer in The Guardian, where Moore had mistakenly repeated an incorrect rumor that Greer had a hysterectomy as a voluntary decision to have herself sterilized. Greer used the term in referring to British journalist Suzanne Moore as having "hair bird's-nested all over the place, fuck-me shoes and three fat inches of cleavage".
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Prominent feminist Germaine Greer brought what had been an "obscure" term to more mainstream notoriety when she used it in 1995. Whenever we did pin-up photos for the soldiers we wore them." They really were the sexiest shoes I have ever seen. Giggling we called them our 'fuck me shoes'.
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In Shelley Winters' first autobiography, "Shelley also Known as Shirley", she recounts a memory from being Marilyn Monroe's roommate: "They were a special kind of sandal -tied in front with a bow-that Marilyn and I used to 'borrow' from the studio. The song "We are the Dead" from David Bowie's 1974 Diamond Dogs album mentions "fuck-me pumps". Tight trousers were called "come fuck-me's" as listed in a 1972 British dictionary of slang, while a 1974 book is cited as making a reference to a person wearing "a pair of fabulous 1940s- Joan Crawford-fuck-me's". The phrase possibly originated in the United States, where two similar terms are used: "'fuck-you shoes' implying a disregard for convention or propriety, or 'fuck-off shoes' where 'fuck-off' means both outsize and aggressive".