Petit traité de désobéissance féministe
By
Stéphanie Pahud
2 ratings - 4.5* vote
Our society encourages men and women, from an early age, to adopt behaviors and stereotypical characteristics, otherwise they will not be recognized as "real" men and "real " women. This small treaty on feminist disobedience aims to examine contemporary representations of gender in order to allow those who do not come from Mars or Venus to disobey the "gender police".In ad
Our society encourages men and women, from an early age, to adopt behaviors and
Our society encourages men and women, from an early age, to adopt behaviors and stereotypical characteristics, otherwise they will not be recognized as "real" men and "real " women. This small treaty on feminist disobedience aims to examine contemporary representations of gender in order to allow those who do not come from Mars or Venus to disobey the "gender police".
In ad
Our society encourages men and women, from an early age, to adopt behaviors and stereotypical characteristics, otherwise they will not be recognized as "real" men and "real " women. This small treaty on feminist disobedience aims to examine contemporary representations of gender in order to allow those who do not come from Mars or Venus to disobey the "gender police".
In addition to the author’s voice are some fifty personalities - journalists, politicians, writers, professors, etc... - who reveal their relationship to feminism.
"If I consider myself a feminist? Oh yes! Even though this term is often seen as aggressive or out dated", Anne-Catherine Lyon.
"I am a feminist. I say this without demagoguery or assignment", Darius Rochebin.
"I am a feminist who loves men", Martina Chyba.
"I am unable to define what it is to really be a feminist",
Martine Brunschwig-Graf.
"Simply saying we're a feminist, when a man, has always seemed foolish cockerel pride, vaguely paternalistic, almost condescending", Christopher Passer.
"We did not go through all these struggles as women to again become females", Salika Wenger.
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