Period. End of Sentence.: A New Chapter in the Fight for Menstrual Justice

by Anita Diamant

Other authorsMelissa Berton (Contributor)
Paperback, 2021

Status

Available

Call number

612.6 D53 2021

Call number

612.6 D53 2021

Description

"Explores the subject of menstruation, from toxic historic and religious roots to how young activists are challenging the silence and shame that can erode self-esteem and even threaten lives ..."--Page 4 of cover.

Publication

Scribner (2021), 192 pages

Original publication date

2021

Original language

English

Language

User reviews

LibraryThing member raizel
I learned a lot about menstrual products: I am from an earlier generation:--- remember riding on Route One in New Jersey and seeing a sign that said "Modess . . . because" with a picture of a woman in an evening gown. The idea that pads and tampons should be as free as toilet paper in public
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restrooms was new to me, but I was quickly convinced. I had never paid attention to the tax on these products, but am now outraged. The ecological impact of disposable pads and tampons was not a consideration in my time. I admit I never thought about menstruants (a more inclusive term to include trans people) who suffered from period poverty, which made going to work or school difficult or impossible. There is a brief discussion of how best to help people: it's better to show women how to produce period products locally than to have volunteers in the United States make them and ship them overseas. In other words, there's a lot of useful information and concepts and issues to be active about. Not a lot about what woman used to do in the past or Taharat Mishpacha.
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ISBN

978-1-9821-4429-6 / 9781982144296
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