Backlash: The Undeclared War Against American Women
L**.
Really didn't sit well with me
There's no denying this book is incredibly well-written and meticulously researched. And I wanted to like it so badly. But it just didn't do it for me. In the new edition, specifically, the author seems so blinded by her pro-Hillary stance that she paints extremely broad strokes disparaging people who have perfectly valid criticisms of her and may have informed reasons to support other candidates (namely Bernie). Overall, she didn't made me feel inspired at all - instead she made me feel shamed as a independently thinking woman, and couldn't seem to understand that there is no one right way to be a progressive female, especially as a WOC. I was just very disappointed and put it down after a couple chapters.
D**N
Well argued, well written
While some of the examples Susan Faludi uses to support her idea - that feminism is experiencing a backlash and women's rights are under attack more than ever - are a bit dated, her essential point remains shockingly valid.What was most disturbing to discover was the subtleness by which feminist gains are undermined: in film, conversation, advertisements, in education and the workplace. This is no liberal rant, but rather a thoughtful, detailed critical analysis of our culture.As a previous reviewer points out, television references are a bit of a stretch, and seem even more dated with the passage of time since the book's initial publication. Nonetheless I found Faludi's comments and observations dead-on. It is a disturbing and thought-provoking read. Recommended.
A**1
I knew this book was a READ and it is
The current political (republican) climate is to THWART LAWS DESIGNED FOR WOMEN, by any means necessary. No one wants an abortion but to restrict one's choice is abominable...and if they were really FOR CHILDREN, THEN THEY'D NOT BE CAGING THOSE FROM ACROSS THE BORDER WHEN THEY ARRIVE, PROVIDE EDUCATION AND FOOD, AND A JOB FOR THEIR PARENTS THAT PAYS SO THEY CAN GROW UP SECURE...MOST OF THE "RED STATES" HAVE ABOMINABLE RECORDS OF ABUSE OF CHILDREN...CHECK IT OUT! This is NOT ABOUT ABORTION, ITS ABOUT KEEPING WOMEN POOR, BROKE, AND AT THE READY OF MEN WHO WOULD ABUSE THEM!
N**T
I would also strongly recommend Faludi's book Stiffed
It's a little dated, but still a worthwhile read about the backlash against feminism - of which we can see another wave now as women make more and more inroads into the professional and academic life and men fall farther behind. I would also strongly recommend Faludi's book Stiffed, about the death of American manhood.
M**K
Backlash: The Undeclared War Against Women
This book is a little dated, but some of the things are going on against women as they are today. It was published in the early 1990's. I especially like the fact that she goes into detail about this backlash by setting chapters aside for movies, TV, etc. If you desire to read a meaty book about feminism, this one will tempt you and will be great reading.
J**E
A solid feminist herstory of the 1980's
This book is one of the most comprehensive looks at the 1980's I think I've ever read. Being born in the early 1990's I was also raised in an era that called itself post-feminist, but this book is really eye opening.My only quibble is that the book in one sense ducks certain internal debates within feminism, but as a text meant for those who aren't necessarily feminists, that makes it more accessible.
D**S
or do not feel like that".
Even though I have not finished reading it as with many books on women's issues; "Backlash" gives the background story to events in America and that was helpful. Makes me feel more at ease being a women, as some women feel "oh women do not do that, or do not feel like that".
G**R
A TRULY AMAZING BOOK
Susan Faludi`s book is truly amazing. With point by point, argument by argument, fact by fact thoroughness, Faludi demolishes numerous sexist myths, including the old chesnut about the "shortage of marriagable men" that has caused so much panic and misery among American women for the last 30 years.This is one of the best books on women and sexism ever written in America. Buy it!
H**N
Enlightening history of backlashes against women's attempts to change their status
Still reading, but already enlightening - a history of the successful backlashes against women's repeated attempts - over centuries - to change their social and economic status. Written in a readable journalistic style, it is fascinating on the role of media and entertainment industries in the backlash pattern (who knew that the original script of Fatal Attraction held the philandering husband responsible?!). Sadly it is very relevant now as we seem to be experiencing a strong backlash, at least in Australia.
D**T
Is this happening again in the 21st century?
This book is a must read for anyone interested in the way women are treated in society today. It analyses the 1980s and the backlash against women in fascinating detail and provides a great deal of verifiable facts and figures to support the author's argument. Faludi looks at the gains made by the women's movement in the 1970s and they way they were opposed in the 1980s. She relates interviews with the prime movers of the New Right in America who are steadfastly opposed to women playing an equal part in society. She exposes the hypocrisy of the women involved in this movement who are living their lives in accordance with feminist principles - sharing childcare and domestic chores with their husbands and working outside the home - but their work outside the home is all directed at dismantling the gains made by women and returning them to the domestic front.The sections I found most frightening were the one analysing popular films of the time and the one about women's reproductive rights. The film `Fatal Attraction' started off as a story about a man having an extra-marital affair while his wife was out of town and being found out when she returned. It did not involve the death of the `other woman' and it made clear the whole situation arose because of the man's actions. It was a moral fable. The finished article was of course a condemnation of the other women as being evil and unnatural and the man and his wife come out of it as saints in comparison. Many other films of the time portrayed career women as evil. The reproductive rights chapter shows how the powerful right wing successfully opposed - and in many cases closed down family planning clinics and persecuted their staff.Many of the examples quoted are from America - that nation of extremes - but there are examples showing a weaker backlash in the UK. In a sense the power of the backlash is a tribute to the power of the women's movement but it also serves to show how quickly all the gains of the 1970s could be lost in both countries. The image which stuck in my mind was of women working in a chemical plant who - because of the laws about the safety of unborn babies - were faced with a choice of losing their jobs working with chemicals or being sterilised. At that time sterilisation meant hysterectomy. The women's family situation often meant they were the sole breadwinner and the jobs were higher paid than most. They felt they had no choice but to have the operation. Several subsequent court cases ruled against the women trying to obtain compensation when they were eventually made redundant. Their stories read like something out of the 19th century not the last quarter of the 20th century.As I say this book is frightening reading and you can see similar things happening today in the 21st century if you read newspapers and women's magazines. Domesticity is glorified, women are encouraged to stay at home with their children and described as strident, unfeminine and harridans if they dare to express their views in public. Is a second backlash against women happening now before our eyes?
A**I
Five Stars
Thank you
C**Y
Five Stars
thought provoking
K**Y
Five Stars
informative
Trustpilot
2 weeks ago
1 day ago