0
I Call Myself a Feminist: The View from Twenty-Five Women Under Thirty
I Call Myself a Feminist is a powerful collection of twenty-five shorts essays, all written by women under thirty. What do these women have in common? It is not their country, not their background, not their skin colour or their sexuality but their strong, passionate voices that call out for change.
This book joins the ranks of recent publications striving to take back the world feminist. Over time the word has been mislabelled as something negative and hateful (many seem to still presume every feminist is a 'man-hater'). This book rallies against those misconceptions, inspiring men and women alike to embrace the word feminist for what it truly stands for, which is equality.
With powerful, evocative and angry voices these young women give personal accounts of what it is to be a feminist in their unique situations. From being related to one of the most famous feminists in the world to being brought up in a society when women are treated as second-class citizens, these essays are snapshots into a group of inspiring minds. This diversity is what makes I Call Myself a Feminist so refreshing to read. With opinions from so many walks of life you are forced to view feminism from a variety of angles you may not have considered before.
I feel I can safely say that the majority, if not all women have felt the blow of sexism at some point in their life, whether in it's violent, aggressive form, through undermining comments such as 'good for a girl' or through the gender pay gap (in my opinion, through tampon tax too). It is these experiences that unite us and these experiences that leave women across the world striving for more.
I Call Myself a Feminist is as important as it is entertaining. Behind the laughs, the self-discovery and even the anger is the simple question, how better could we make the world if men and women were treated equally? Read this book, act on how it makes you feel and get us that one step closer to finding out.
Buy your copy of I Call Myself a Feminist edited by Victoria Pepe, Rachel Holmes, Amy Annette, Alice Stride and Martha Mosse from Amazon here
The Tattooed Book
Hi, I'm Cara, the blogger behind The Tattooed Book. When I'm not busy being a book geek, I'm a bad runner, tattoo collector and you'll likely find me trying to stroke a dog that isn't interested. Will work for books and responds well to GIF based conversations. Click on the bird bellow to follow me on Twitter or contact me at thetattooedbook@yahoo.co.uk.
Popular Posts
-
Blackwood by Gwenda Bond In 1587 an English settlement was created on Roanoke Island, in what is now known as Virginia, North America....
-
The Horologicon by Mark Forsyth Mark Forsyth produced one of the funniest and most informative Christmas bestsellers last year, with...
-
Eden Gardens by Louise Brown Hello and welcome to the first stop on the Eden Gardens blog tour! Eden Gardens is an intoxicating...
-
Black Moon by Kenneth Calhoun It started as a rumour, whisperings about a wave of insomnia sweeping the nation and raising the pric...
-
The Humans by Matt Haig Professor Andrew Martin of Cambridge University has spent years trying to prove the Riemann Hypothesis and u...
-
The Hundred Year Old Man Who Climbed Out of the Window and Disappeared by Jonas Jonasson The Hundred Year Old Man Who Climbed Out of ...
-
Four and Twenty Blackbirds by Cherie Priest Cherie Priest may be best known as the Queen of steampunk with her award-winning Clockwork...
-
Book Highlights for October 2016 Hurrah, Halloween month is here at last! The leaves are changing, the mornings are almost freezing a...
Pages
About Me
Hi, I'm Cara and welcome to my bookish world. By day I'm a communication, social media and PR specialist and in my spare time, I'm a book blogger. From literary classics to sci-fi graphic novels, I love it all.
Get in touch with me at thetattooedbook@yahoo.co.uk
Search This Blog
Blog Archive
-
▼
2015
(33)
-
▼
November
(19)
- The Guest Cat by Takashi Hiraide
- A Snow Garden by Rachel Joyce
- Frozen Charlotte by Alex Bell
- Blog Tour: The Hunter of the Dark by Donato Carrisi
- I Call Myself a Feminist: The View from Twenty-Fiv...
- Only Ever Yours by Louise O’Neill
- Pretty Baby by Mary Kubica
- Freedom’s Child by Jax Miller
- Animals by Emma Jane Unsworth
- Armada by Ernie Cline
- The Quality of Silence by Rosamund Lupton
- Way Down Dark by JP Smythe
- Villa America by Liza Klaussmann
- How I Lost You by Jenny Blackhurst
- A Robot in the Garden by Deborah Install
- Haterz by James Goss
- Holy Cow by David Duchovny
- Reasons to Stay Alive by Matt Haig: Review
- All the Bright Places by Jennifer Niven
-
▼
November
(19)
