Reasonable Creatures: Essays on Women and Feminism

by Katha Pollitt

Paperback, 1995

Status

Available

Call number

305.420973

Collection

Publication

Vintage (1995), 208 pages

Description

She writes about sex, children's books, the media, breast implants, the mind of an antiabortionist. She invokes Moby Dick and Gilligan's Island, Lorna Bobbitt and Lysistrata ("the original woman's strike-for-peace-nik"). For more than a decade, in her wonderfully provocative, wittily astute, graceful and gutsy pieces in The Nation, The New Yorker and The New York Times, she has taken the strongest positions on the thorniest moral issues and the most controversial events, from date rape to surrogate motherhood, to violence against women, to the Anita Hill hearings, to fetal rights and mothers' "wrongs." She asks "Who's Afraid of Hillary Clinton?," considers the Smurfette Principle and explains why she hates "Family Values." She takes aim at nineteen targets in all. Her pieces delight by their language - the mastery that won a National Book Critics Circle Award for her first book of poems - and her refusal, ever, to be ponderous.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member Devil_llama
This is that rare book - a book that doesn't miss on any level. Great prose style, good solid data, and just the right amount of snark. I wish I could say this 20 year old book was out of date; unfortunately, the problems discussed here have continued, and in fact gotten worse since the book was
Show More
written. While we have moved on from some of the specific cases she talks about, others have sprung up to take their place. The politicians have changed, we're seemingly a long way from the Reagan administration, Dan Quayle, and Murphy Brown, but the current election cycle simply reinforces the need for books like this.
Show Less

Awards

Original language

English

Original publication date

1994

Physical description

208 p.; 5.25 inches

ISBN

0679762787 / 9780679762782

Similar in this library

Page: 0.37 seconds