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Are Men Necessary? Please Login or Join to Download.
- Description:
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ABOUT THE BOOK
Are Men Necessary?: When Sexes Collide
FROM THE PUBLISHER
Fresh from her success with the bestselling
Bushworld, Maureen Dowd turns her lapidary prose
and wicked wit to a topic even more incendiary
than presidential politics: sexual politics.
Four decades after the sexual revolution, nothing has
worked out the way it was supposed to. The sexes are
circling each other as uneasily and comically as ever,
from the bedroom to the boardroom to the Situation Room,
and now the New York Times columnist who won a Pulitzer Prize
in 1999 for saucy and incisive commentary about the roundelay
of Bill, Monica, Hillary, and Ken Starr digs into the Y and X files,
exploring the mysteries and muddles of sexual combat in
America.
In a new book filled with chapters that sparkle, startle, and
amuse, Dowd explains why getting ready for a date went from
glossing and gargling to Paxiling and Googling; why men are in an
evolutionary and romantic shame spiral; why women have
reeled backward in many ways; why men may be biologically
unsuited to hold higher office, given their diva fits and catfights,
teary confessions and fashion obsessions; why women are fixated
on their looks more than ever, freezing their faces and emotions
in an orgy of plasticity that makes the Stepford Wives
look authentic; why male politicians and male institutions get
tripped up in so much monkey business; why many alpha
women from Martha to Hillary can have a successful second act
only after becoming humiliated victims; and why the new definition
of Having It All is less about empowerment and equality
than about flirting and getting rescued, downshifting from "You
go, girl!" to "You go lie down, girl!"
In addition, Dowd, who has reported on historic moments
on the sexual battlefield from Geraldine Ferraro's vice-presidential
run to the Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas hearings to Hillary Rodham
Clinton's reign as co-president, explores not only how many
of these shining feminist triumphs soured, backfiring on women,
but also how Hillary, a feminist icon busy plotting her campaign
to be the first woman president, delivered the final blow to
female solidarity herself.
Women's liberation has been less a steady trajectory than a
confusing zigzag. Feminism lasted for a nanosecond and generated
a gender tangle that has bewitched, bothered, and bewildered
men and women for forty years. Now comes a woman to
cut through the tangle and tickle Adam's rib. The battle of the
sexes will never be the same.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Dowd's Bushworld, collecting her amped New York Times op-eds, hit big during the 2004 presidential campaign. This follow-up is as slapdash as the earlier book was slash-and-burn. What Dowd seems really to want to do is dish up anecdotes of gender bias in the media, which she does with her usual aplomb-everything from how Elizabeth Vargas was booted out of Peter Jennings's vacant chair at ABC during his illness ("I'm not sure if she has the gravitas," opines an exec) to the guys who won't date Dowd because she's got more Beltway juice (and money) than they. The rest is padding: endless secondary source and pundit quotes ("In Time, Andrew Sullivan wondered: `So a woman is less a woman if she is a scientist or journalist or Prime Minister?' "); examples of gender relations gone wrong in books, film and TV; random interview blips ("Carrie, a publicist in her late twenties from Long Island, told me...."); little musings from girlhood that are rarely revealing enough; endless career rehashes of everyone from Anita Hill to Helen Gurley Brown. A chapter on dating is a mishmash of everything from The Rules to He's Just Not That into You; one on reproductive science (that asks the title question for real) ends up referring a lot to orgasm. It's intermittently entertaining, but neither sharp enough nor sustained enough to work as a book. Agent, Esther Newberg. (Nov. 8) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Library Journal
Dowd (Bushworld: Enter at Your Own Risk), a Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist for the New York Times, here prese
- Submitted On:
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09 Sep 2007
- File Author:
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Dowd, Maureen
- File Size:
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2.05 MB
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