Burn it down Women writing about anger

Book - 2019

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305.42/Burn
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Subjects
Published
New York : Seal Press [2019]
Language
English
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
vii, 252 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781580058933
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Editor Dancyger collects essays from 22 female writers contemplating (and unleashing) anger, continuing the #MeToo ethos of emotional transparency and righteous indignation, to bracing and powerful effect. The writers are a diverse group and cover a wide range of experiences. Samantha Riedel recalls unlearning a lifetime of aggressive masculine social conditioning after transitioning from male to female, while still harnessing the power of anger to scare off harassers and put TERFs (trans-exclusionary radical feminists) in their place. Lisa Marie Basile documents years of suffering from a chronic illness and having her symptoms minimized by doctors and friends alike, declaring her refusal to be dismissed: "There is too much beauty in being alive to silence my intuition, to ignore my body, to not sing its needs and demand they be met." Evette Dionne writes of the "angry black woman" stereotype, and how it silences women and shapes perceptions of famous African-American women such as Serena Williams. Other rage-inducing topics include intentional misgendering, religious discrimination, sexism in the classroom, and perimenopause. As Dancyger notes in her introduction, women's anger has long been trivialized and discredited, but this collection allows that anger the space to flourish. It is a cathartic and often inspiring reading experience. (Oct.)

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Review by Library Journal Review

Journalist and editor Dancyger's collection comprises essays that address subsets of female anger, including what it means to be hangry, the minimization of black women's anger by labeling it as "attitude," and the anger of women within religious contexts. What unites them are the incredible personal reflections within each essay, which reflect Dancyger's goal of showing anger as and for itself, rather than suggesting it is a means to an end, a political catalyst, or an emotion that--to be valid--must be linked to a larger purpose. Contributors include novelist and essayist Leslie Jamison; Melissa Febos, (Lambda Literary Award-winning memoirist, Abandon Me); and Evette Dionne, editor in chief, Bitch Media. Dancyger wants her readers to understand that anger is justified and/or not in need of justification because of the patriarchal structures that have shaped women's lives, voices, and sense of self. VERDICT These powerful essays strike a balance between memoir and theory and will be useful in courses on feminist theory as they provide highly individualized accounts of women's experiences.--Emily Bowles, Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An editor and journalist gathers 22 essays from a diverse group of contemporary women writers about the nature of modern female rage.Catapult contributing editor Dancyger creates a cathartic space for both well- and lesser-known writers to express the various ways in which their anger has manifested in their lives. The opening essay, Leslie Jamison's "Lungs Full of Burning," sets the tone for the rest of the book. For years, Jamison took pride in being "someone who wasn't prone to anger" until she realized that the sadness she often felt was really a manifestation of a rage society would not let her own. Monet Patrice Thomas follows Jamison with a discussion of how society considers angry black women to have "an attitude" and how, in general, they are allowed to feel only one emotion: fear. Reclaiming angerand an abused bodyis at the heart of Rios de la Luz's essay "Enojada," which details her experiences with sexual molestation suffered at the hands of her mother's boyfriend. In "On Transfeminine Anger," Samantha Riedel describes the rage she felt as a gender-confused boy and then in the early years of her trans womanhood, when she railed against "the forces of misogyny and transphobia" only to end up hurting people she cared about. Destructive as anger can be, Reema Zaman shows how it can also liberate. Zaman depicts the moment she stood up to her bullying husband and told him, "I was born for life beyond you." In "The Color of Being Muslim," Shaheen Pasha talks about her rage at "the suffocating expectations of others," both within and without the Pakistani American community, who saw her as being too Muslim or not Muslim enough. Powerful and provocative, this collection is an instructive read for anyone seeking to understand the many facesand painsof womanhood in 21st-century America.An incisive collection of writing about how women's anger "doesn't have to be useful to deserve a voice." Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.