Daly published a number of works, and is perhaps best known for her second book,
Beyond God the Father (1973).
Beyond God the Father is the last book in which Daly really considers God a substantive subject. She laid out her systematic theology, following
Paul Tillich's example. Often regarded as a foundational work in feminist theology,
Beyond God the Father is her attempt to explain and overcome
androcentrism in
Western religion, and it is notable for its playful writing style and its attempt to rehabilitate "God-talk" for the
women's liberation movement by critically building on the writing of existentialist theologians such as Paul Tillich and
Martin Buber. While the former increasingly characterized her writing, she soon abandoned the latter. In
Gyn/Ecology: The Metaethics of Radical Feminism (1978), Daly argues that men throughout history have sought to oppress women. In this book she moves beyond her previous thoughts on the history of patriarchy to the focus on the actual practices that, in her view, perpetuate patriarchy, which she calls a religion. (1984) and ''Websters' First New Intergalactic Wickedary of the English Language
(1987) introduce and explore an alternative language to explain the process of exorcism and ecstasy. In Wickedary'' Daly provides definitions as well as chants that she says can be used by women to free themselves from patriarchal oppression. She also explores the labels that she says patriarchal society places on women to prolong what she sees as male domination of society. Daly said it is the role of women to unveil the liberatory nature of labels such as "Hag", "Witch", and "Lunatic". Daly's work continues to influence feminism and
feminist theology, as well as the developing concept of
biophilia as an alternative and challenge to social necrophilia. She was an
ethical vegetarian and
animal rights activist.
Gyn/Ecology,
Pure Lust, and ''Websters' First New Intergalactic Wickedary'' all endorse anti-
vivisection and
anti-fur positions. Daly was a member of the advisory board of Feminists For Animal Rights, a group which is now defunct. Daly created her own theological anthropology based around the context of what it means to be a woman. She created a thought-praxis that separates the world into the world of false images that create oppression and the world of communion in true being. She labeled these two areas foreground and Background respectively. Daly considered the foreground the realm of patriarchy and the Background the realm of Woman. She argued that the Background is under and behind the surface of the false reality of the foreground. The foreground, for Daly, was a distortion of true being, the paternalistic society in which she said most people live. It has no real energy, but drains the "life energy" of women residing in the Background. In her view, the foreground creates a world of poisons that contaminate natural life. She called the male-centered world of the foreground necrophilic, hating all living things. In contrast, she conceived of the Background as a place where all living things connect. According to Lucy Sargisson, "Daly seeks in
Gyn/Ecology (1987) a true, wild, Woman's self, which she perceives to be dormant in women, temporarily pacified by patriarchal systems of domination."
Audre Lorde expressed concern over
Gyn/Ecology in an open letter, citing homogenizing tendencies, and a refusal to acknowledge the "
herstory and myth" of women of color. The letter, and Daly's apparent decision not to publicly respond, greatly affected the reception of Daly's work among other feminist theorists, and has been described as a "paradigmatic example of challenges to white feminist theory by feminists of color in the 1980s." Daly's reply letter to Lorde, dated four and a half months later, was found in 2003 in Lorde's files after she died. Daly's reply was followed in a week by a meeting with Lorde at which Daly said, among other things, that
Gyn/Ecology was not a compendium of goddesses but limited to "those goddess myths and symbols that were direct sources of Christian myth," but whether this was accepted by Lorde was unknown at the time.
Papers After her death, Daly's papers were contributed to the Sophia Smith Collection of Women's History at
Smith College. == Perspectives on Daly's work ==