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Great Feminist Books? (Original Post) aswanson Feb 2016 OP
My first feminist author was Kate Chopin rocktivity Feb 2016 #1
Feminism Unmodified by Catharine MacKinnon Stargleamer Feb 2016 #2
Doris Lessing's The Golden Notebook is a classic. japple Feb 2016 #3
Message auto-removed Name removed Mar 2017 #4
"The Feminine Mystique" athena Apr 2017 #5
The Second Sex.. whathehell May 2018 #6
You could peruse the following: lounge_jam Jan 2019 #7
More good non-fiction lounge_jam Jan 2019 #8

Stargleamer

(2,180 posts)
2. Feminism Unmodified by Catharine MacKinnon
Mon Feb 8, 2016, 12:39 AM
Feb 2016

any of her other books would be fantastic to start reading as well.

Response to aswanson (Original post)

athena

(4,187 posts)
5. "The Feminine Mystique"
Sat Apr 22, 2017, 06:16 PM
Apr 2017

It's old but still very relevant. I read it in grad school, decades after it was published, and it helped me form most of my current opinions about the problem with gender roles.

Another book I really liked when I read it almost two decades ago was "The Mismeasure of Woman" by Carol Tavris.

lounge_jam

(41 posts)
7. You could peruse the following:
Mon Jan 7, 2019, 06:48 AM
Jan 2019

Since you mention critical theory, you could read Andrea Long's On Liking Women, a very provocative and engaging piece on feminism, trans feminism, and lesbian feminism (it also focuses on the tensions between these three currents)

On the other hand, you could also read the fierce Margaret Atwood's short story titled "Stone Mattress." It involves a critical examination of concepts such as justice, rehabilitation and what constitutes an appropriate response to sexual offences. It is, as most of her works, are immensely urgent.

Of course there is the canon: Judith Butler, Susan Hekman, Maria Mies, Vandana Shiva, Arundathi Roy, Luce Irigaray, etc.

Hope this helps!

lounge_jam

(41 posts)
8. More good non-fiction
Mon Jan 14, 2019, 02:12 AM
Jan 2019

Last edited Mon Jan 14, 2019, 05:54 AM - Edit history (1)

I thought I'd share this, too (Full Frontal Feminism). It's a good, introductory account of issues that are generally considered "feminist." It is lucid and straightforward, yet very critical.

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