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Includes the name: Deirdre Englisch

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Birthdate
1948
Gender
female
Short biography
Deirdre English (born 1948) is the former editor of Mother Jones and author of numerous articles for national publications and television documentaries.

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Igrew up in a conservative home in a conservative state with a religion that enshrined conservatism more than Christianity. Fortunately, I was allowed to read, and reading has become a salvation of sorts. As I’ve aged and expanded my horizons, I’ve nonetheless grown concerned that I might have picked up some bad habits along the way. I’m recognized as an expert in my field, but I strive not to be one that oppresses others. Instead, I seek to empower others, and that includes women. Thus, I picked up this book, now in a revised edition supplanting its classic in the late 1970s.

Throughout history, women have been told who to be much more than they’ve been empowered to do the telling. When they’ve held leadership roles, their audiences are often limited to other women and children. Sometimes, the “children” part is even limited just to girls. The role of an “expert” has often functioned to put women in a box, not of their own making. Experts, however, changed their advice over time. This confusion often obscured rather than helped.

Things were not always so. Before the industrial revolution, women used to play a recognized, necessary role in an agrarian society. After industrial workplaces took root, it became hard to put women into a society organized around male work. Women were always put in a place, though this place tended to change with time. In this book, Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English document how experts came to rule the roost, so to speak, of womankind and how women eventually rebelled to find their own perspectives after the twentieth century’s feminism.

It’s been almost two decades since this revised edition has been published. Personally, I’ve grown more awake to the contributions of women around me. American culture seems even more entrenched in culture wars, to the point of empowering anti-feminists, seemingly just for effect. This book remains important to remind us of where we’ve come from. Humanity need not suffer endless wars over how much to restrict people from choosing, and people can have real choices without destroying society. Centralized experts do not know everything. This book contributes a reasoned explanation for these feminist views and empowers readers to choose for themselves.
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scottjpearson | 20 other reviews | Mar 30, 2024 |
I read this a few years ago so only have notes made at the time to go by although I think the book was reasonably interesting:

This book was published in the 1970s and is a feminist study of the medical advice given to American women over the past 150 years or so.
 
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kitsune_reader | 20 other reviews | Nov 23, 2023 |
Very short book (it was originally a pamphlet).

Good overview/introduction of women's status in healthcare, from witches to nurses.
 
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matsuko | 6 other reviews | Aug 17, 2023 |
Discusses healthcare given to women of all races and classes throughout US history. This book will enrage you. The inequalities of care are maddening.

I devoured this book in 2 sittings. So well written.
 
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MarigoldJackiFitz | Jul 6, 2023 |

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Works
4
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1
Members
1,900
Popularity
#13,551
Rating
3.9
Reviews
30
ISBNs
28
Languages
6

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