At the root of this longing : reconciling a spiritual hunger and a feminist thirst

by Carol Flinders

Paper Book, 1998

Status

Available

Call number

305.42/092

Collection

Publication

[San Francisco] : HarperSanFrancisco, c1998.

Description

In At the Root of This Longing, Flinders identifies the four key points at which the paths of spirituality and feminism seem to collide--vowing silence vs. finding voice, relinquishing ego vs. establishing 'self', resisting desire vs. reclaiming the body, and enclosure vs. freedom--and sets out to discover not only the sources of these conflicts, but how they can be reconciled. With a sense of urgency brought on by events in her own life, Flinders deals with the alienation that women have experienced not only from themselves and each other, but from the sacred. She finds inspiration in the story of fourteenth-century mystic Julian of Norwich and her direct experience of God, in India's legendary Draupadi, who would not allow a brutal physical assault to damage her sense of personal power, as well as in Flinders's own experiences as a meditation teacher and practitioner. Flinders reveals that spirituality and feminism are not mutually exclusive at all but very much require one another.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member maemaemae
I got this book after reading an excellent article about the author in Bitch Magazine. It's part history of women in spiritual traditions (Buddhism, convent life) and part an analysis of the relationship between a) women and spirituality and b) violence against women. This is not a straight
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academic work as Flinder's autobiographical experiences appear within the text, and I found this to be a wise stylistic choice as it made for a page-turning read. Reading this book is invigorating , and I hated that it had to come to an end.
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LibraryThing member aulsmith
Flinders is first a Buddhist and then a feminist. If you share her sensibilities, you will probably enjoy this book. However, I am not a Buddhist and I have no place for meditation in my life, so the vast majority of this book was lost on me. She does have one excellent section where she critiques
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meditation from a feminist perspective. She then goes on to ignore her own critique and advocate meditation. But if you want a bunch of good reasons why feminists might not want to waste their time meditating, that section is worth reading.
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LibraryThing member 3wheeledlibrarian
Reading Flinders reminds me that years ago I considered doing a graduate degree in Women's Studies. It makes me aware of what a very great trust it is to have an almost grown up girl child in my keeping. And I empathize, as a spiritually active woman, in Flinder's dilemna

Language

Physical description

369 p.; 22 cm

ISBN

006251315X / 9780062513151

Local notes

FB

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