Suswatibasu (1701 KP) rated Jane Eyre in Books
Oct 10, 2017 (Updated Oct 10, 2017)
Sam (228 KP) rated Sorcerer to the Crown (Sorcerer Royal #1) in Books
Aug 8, 2019
Wonder Tales: Six Stories of Enchantment
Book
Marina Warner has gathered together a magical collection of fairy tales by the great women...
Reds (1981)
Movie
American journalist John Reed (Warren Beatty) journeys to Russia to document the Boleshevik...
Hillary Rodham Clinton Presidential Playset
Book
Cast your vote early with this fun, foldable pop-up play set featuring paper dolls of Hillary...
Sjon recommended The Hearing Trumpet in Books (curated)
The Female Eunuch
Book
The 50th Anniversary edition of the ground-breaking, worldwide bestselling feminist tract. ‘The...
Goddess in the Stacks (553 KP) rated The Female Persuasion in Books
May 8, 2018
All of the characters have some major flaws. Greer is selfish, and doesn't understand when things don't go according to plan. Cory's life gets entirely derailed by a tragedy he couldn't prevent, but in some ways he lets the derailment happen. If he'd really wanted what he said he wanted (and perhaps he didn't) he could have fixed his trajectory. Zee is a little brash and headstrong, but the most likable character in the book. Faith - oh, Faith. Faith is the older feminist mentor who turns out to be far more jaded than expected.
I have lots of conflicts about Faith. She is one of those feminists who doesn't seem to care for individual women - she can't even remember most of the women who credit her with changing their lives - but she keeps her eyes on the big picture. And as I brought up in book club, the movement does need people who see the big picture. Those people are important - but they still need certain principles that I think Faith lacks.
IR mentioned that Cory was a good foil to all the female characters in the book, and he needed his flaws, because otherwise he would be the perfect feminist boyfriend. And no one is perfect.
We were all a little disappointed with the ending; it felt like Wolitzer skipped a whole section of the story. How did Greer get from point A to point B? (Well, really, it's more like the book covers Points A, B, C, and E. And skips D.)
I think one of my favorite quotes from the book (I misattributed it to Faith at the book club, it turns out it came from Greer) was the one about being given permission:
"I think that's what the people who change our lives always do. They give us permission to be the person we secretly really long to be but maybe don't feel we're allowed to be. Many of you here in this room.....had someone like that, didn't you? Someone who gave you permission. Someone who saw you and heard you. Heard your voice."
I think that really sums up mentorship, in some ways. Women are often still socialized to not trust their own instincts, to lean on outside opinions for validation. (I know I was.) To be given permission and encouragement to trust yourself can be a life-changing event.
I really enjoyed this book. I saw bits of myself in all four characters - Faith's practicality, Greer's impressionability, Zee's idealism, and even a little of Cory's foggy despair and lack of ambition. I wouldn't call it a feminist classic. But it was a good book.
To see all my reviews (and my experience at the Barnes & Noble Book Club event where we talked about this book!) go to http://goddessinthestacks.wordpress.com
Saerie_Faerie (18 KP) rated Black Panther (2018) in Movies
Feb 24, 2018
On top of the wonderful culture, we get amazingly Badass feminist Black women. They take care of themselves, they fight, they run the science department for the entire country, they save themselves, they go out and save the world, they stand up against stupid decisions. Just absolutely amazing.
You also, of course, get all of the amazing superhero moments. Action-packed for the right amount, the plot makes sense and is followable. A twist that is amazing and once you see it you see all of the lead up to it, which is so absolutely wonderful, it doesn't just appear out of nowhere.
I walked out wanting to immediately buy the dvd and watch it again and that was over a week ago. Absolutely stunning and everyone should go see it and fully absorb it and the message it gives.
The Twilight of Cutting: African Activism and Life After NGOs
Book
The last three decades have witnessed a proliferation of nongovernmental organizations engaging in...