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4 oeuvres 685 utilisateurs 11 critiques 2 Favoris

A propos de l'auteur

Wendy Shalit began writing A Return to Modesty as an undergrad at Williams College, where she received her B.A. in philosophy in 1997. Shalit's essays have appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The New York Times, and other publications. She currently lives with her husband and children in Toronto.
Crédit image: Helen Tansey

Œuvres de Wendy Shalit

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1975
Sexe
female

Membres

Critiques

As a graduate project this book deserves 4 stars for in-depth research along with an engaging voice. Made for great discussions in our book group and I'd love to get my teenage, cute daughter to read it...someday.
 
Signalé
rebwaring | 7 autres critiques | Aug 14, 2023 |
This book is basically a rant. It’s a very pained rant, although not very true. I suppose that at that age, kids tend to either rant or screw around, but she really placed herself above them.

For some theologians, there are Seven Deadly Sins, but for much of the culture, “sin” means “lust”, end of story, and lying and bullying don’t count as sins— and pride is *good*! It’s a strategy, not the truth, and it’s hard to win over the other side when you’re so obviously lying to them.

I don’t think she understands the harm that she does to her argument. After explaining that everyone is a whore and nobody wants to shut the whores down: “What! Afraid to sound like me! I’m the greatest!”

I think the highlight for me was when she defended bars—yes, alcohol bars. Sometimes the right has this issue where they’re not sure if conservative means the Bible or conservative means ‘like folks’, not academic, so they simply assume that the two must be the same. So being clingy and possessive must be biblical because it’s the opposite of being liberated. Liberals hate something—must be great!.... Duels are great! Guys used to shoot each other down, must be romantic!

But my favorite is this: bars are “sexist”—let me pay for that beautiful— therefore they are places where women will be “treated well”, never mind all the 18th-century novels about disastrous seduction that she likes so much, and the ***whole fucking point of a book about sexual purity***! Whoops!

Enemy! Me Tarzan! Me have enemy!

And I’m going to cut it there, because I actually feel kinda bad for her.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
smallself | 7 autres critiques | Aug 1, 2019 |
There were a lot of good things about this book, but I often found myself wishing she had written it about fifteen years later. She was young and a bit naive when she wrote this and some parts felt more like a rant rather than an informed and researched argument. I had a hard time following her reasoning sometimes, but I appreciate that there is a book out there defending modesty. I especially appreciated that she addressed issues of gender differences, natural consequences, and accountability.
 
Signalé
aclaybasket13 | 7 autres critiques | Jul 29, 2016 |
Many of the problems we hear about today -- sexual harassment, date rape, young women who suffer from eating disorders and report feeling a lack of control over their bodies -- are all connected, I believe, to our culture's attack on modesty.
 
Signalé
kijabi1 | 7 autres critiques | Jan 1, 2012 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
4
Membres
685
Popularité
#36,934
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
11
ISBN
13
Langues
2
Favoris
2

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