Why Men Get Under Your Feet: Difference between revisions
m (1 revision: Discworld import 2) |
RedReplicant (talk | contribs) No edit summary |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
A self-help book and basic gender polemic for women | A self-help book and basic gender polemic for women. [[Adora Belle Dearheart]] read a copy and then passed it on to [[Gladys]]. The exact content is unknown, but it did impress upon Gladys the impression that a friendly pat on the shoulder was ''Very Nearly Inappropriate Touching''. Of course, as golem, Gladys has been swayed by everything from the self-help column to the ladies' advice magazine, so perhaps not much can be said for the book's persuasive capabilities... | ||
Latest revision as of 02:35, 30 November 2014
A self-help book and basic gender polemic for women. Adora Belle Dearheart read a copy and then passed it on to Gladys. The exact content is unknown, but it did impress upon Gladys the impression that a friendly pat on the shoulder was Very Nearly Inappropriate Touching. Of course, as golem, Gladys has been swayed by everything from the self-help column to the ladies' advice magazine, so perhaps not much can be said for the book's persuasive capabilities...
Annotation
There is a whole shelf of Roundworld referents for this sort of book, possibly beginning with Jilly Cooper's manifesto Superwoman, a late 1970's guide to how a woman might have it all - home, career, income - without deferring to men. There are also suspicious attitudinal similarities to Germaine Greer's feminist polemic The Female Eunuch, which is far more militant and calls for a severance with past attitudes of female deference and service to men.