Home :: Books :: Audiocassettes  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes

Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction
Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions

Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions

List Price: $17.95
Your Price:
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 2 3 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Just great
Review: I'm not crazy about essays, but the title got my attention, so I bought this book. I had the best time reading it; it's really clever, sometimes sad, definitely wry, and wonderfully written; with some of the essays I didn't know whether to laugh or to cry. Most of them are touching, others are plain hilarious (everyone should read "If Men Could Menstruate", I laughed until the walls rattled).

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Page Out of History
Review: In the introduction to "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions," Gloria Steinem says that feminism is for people who "dream of a justice that is yet to come and live on the edge of history." In essence, Steinem was also describing what this book is about -- transforming history through activism. I absolutely loved reading "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions" because I got to sit at the feet of the "Queen" of feminism herself as she describes her battle for women and her struggle for a society of integrity, love, and equality. Her book consists of a collection of essays written from 1963-1983 on a plethora of topics from her childhood to her work in national politics. Steinem also writes on other topics such as time, food, college reunions, sisterhood, women's sexuality, and, in addition to all of that, she profiles the lives of five famous women. Gloria says it best herself, "There is no subject that feminism doesn't transform."

My favorite essay from this book is "I Was a Playboy Bunny," in which Steinem gives her account of infiltrating the Playboy Club to investigate what goes on "behind the scenes." Although it was shocking to read about how the "Bunnies" are treated, it was also funny to hear about Steinem's wacky experiences while running the hat check or serving drinks. She also managed to socialize with the other Bunnies in the back room, discovering that women are lured into the club with promises of high wages, but many were making barely enough to get by. Steinem ridicules the way that the Bunnies are treated by both the patrons and the management, pointing out that the women are being used as objects without regard to their personal feelings or sense of dignity. A poignant comment made at the end of the article casts some light on the bigger picture -- Steinem says that feminism has helped her to realize that "all women are Bunnies." After having read about her "job" in the Playboy Club and then comparing it to the way that women in general are treated, I couldn't agree more. While I was reading it, I thought that this was a funny essay that intended to poke fun, but after reading Steinem's correlation to society, I realize that the article should serve a sobering reminder of why feminism is so important. "I Was a Playboy Bunny" is a wake-up call to men and women everywhere.

Overall, I thought that "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions" was an awesome book. Steinem's lucid writing about how much feminism grew during just two decades should serve as an inspiration to feminists and other activists of the future. I wish I could say that the Feminist Revolution is over and that we can move on to other issues, but the fact remains that feminism has only just begun -- so much of what Steinem writes about is still relevant today. As we look ahead, we can use this book as a tool for producing change -- one only needs to remember the title, "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions." With these two principles, we will indeed live on the edge of history and not only dream, but take an active role in creating the justice that is yet to come.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Page Out of History
Review: In the introduction to "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions," Gloria Steinem says that feminism is for people who "dream of a justice that is yet to come and live on the edge of history." In essence, Steinem was also describing what this book is about -- transforming history through activism. I absolutely loved reading "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions" because I got to sit at the feet of the "Queen" of feminism herself as she describes her battle for women and her struggle for a society of integrity, love, and equality. Her book consists of a collection of essays written from 1963-1983 on a plethora of topics from her childhood to her work in national politics. Steinem also writes on other topics such as time, food, college reunions, sisterhood, women's sexuality, and, in addition to all of that, she profiles the lives of five famous women. Gloria says it best herself, "There is no subject that feminism doesn't transform."

My favorite essay from this book is "I Was a Playboy Bunny," in which Steinem gives her account of infiltrating the Playboy Club to investigate what goes on "behind the scenes." Although it was shocking to read about how the "Bunnies" are treated, it was also funny to hear about Steinem's wacky experiences while running the hat check or serving drinks. She also managed to socialize with the other Bunnies in the back room, discovering that women are lured into the club with promises of high wages, but many were making barely enough to get by. Steinem ridicules the way that the Bunnies are treated by both the patrons and the management, pointing out that the women are being used as objects without regard to their personal feelings or sense of dignity. A poignant comment made at the end of the article casts some light on the bigger picture -- Steinem says that feminism has helped her to realize that "all women are Bunnies." After having read about her "job" in the Playboy Club and then comparing it to the way that women in general are treated, I couldn't agree more. While I was reading it, I thought that this was a funny essay that intended to poke fun, but after reading Steinem's correlation to society, I realize that the article should serve a sobering reminder of why feminism is so important. "I Was a Playboy Bunny" is a wake-up call to men and women everywhere.

Overall, I thought that "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions" was an awesome book. Steinem's lucid writing about how much feminism grew during just two decades should serve as an inspiration to feminists and other activists of the future. I wish I could say that the Feminist Revolution is over and that we can move on to other issues, but the fact remains that feminism has only just begun -- so much of what Steinem writes about is still relevant today. As we look ahead, we can use this book as a tool for producing change -- one only needs to remember the title, "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions." With these two principles, we will indeed live on the edge of history and not only dream, but take an active role in creating the justice that is yet to come.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A Mixed Bag
Review: Like so much feminist writing, Gloria Stienem's Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions is a very mixed bag of thought. On the one hand, there are many important issues addressed in this book. Equal pay for equal work, sexual harrassment, the glass ceiling, good health care, and the objectification of women are among some of the topics covered. As this book was written more than a decade ago, it is a shame to see that these issues are still as relevant as they ever were. Gloria Steinem does an excellent job in illustrating these issues with her personal stories. She also has the ability to be very funny as an author, making her reader laugh at the sad ridiculousness of so many things.

Unfortunately, like most feminist literature, this work confuses the liberation and equality with doing whatever one wants. Abortion, of course, is the worst example of this. The author is always careful to defend a woman's right 'to choose' but never actually comes out to say what she is 'choosing'. The choice is to end a human life - even science argees with that! An embryo (because pro-abortionists claim that an embryo is not a fetus, and therefore not human, until after the first trimester(and even that they cannot agree upon, some say it is earlier some say later)) has a separate DNA code from either it's mother or it's father, or any other human being on the planet. Using high-resolution imaging, at three weeks from conception (when most women would be finding out that they are pregnant and arranging for thier abortion, if that is their 'choice') you can visibly see a head, eyes, ears, body, spine, and the beginning of hands and feet. Scientists have tried, and failed, to come up with a specific date at which the fetus becomes human (therefore creating a date at which it is inhuman before that). There is no longer any scientific doubt as to whether a conception is human. Clearly abortion is killing. Feminism will never do women any good until we stop this evil thing. Abortion does not only kill babies, it hurts women. Over and over studies have shown that women who have had abortions wish that they had not. Many are seriously damaged both mentally and emotionally. Abortion also hurts women's bodies. Every abortion a woman has doubles her chance of premature birth with subsequent pregnancies. Abortion also damages the uterus and can make it impossible for a woman to conceive. Abortion is also implicated in some types of reproductive cancers. How can this be good for women?

This book, like much feminine work, also encourages a 'do what you wanna do' type philosophy. Anything that makes a woman feel good is no longer disallowed. Sex outside of marriage, working when you have small children, easy divorce, etc. The author's justifications for these things seem to be two-fold 1.The 'everyone else is doing it' mentality. Didn't our mothers teach us better than that? 2.Men have been getting away with it, so we should, too! I would like to hope that just because men do something that is wrong (like have sex outside of marriage) that this doesn't make it ok. Doing something bad, just because we can, doesn't help us. It only brings us down to their level.

Finally, one of the most disturbing things about this book is the question that isn't asked - What rights to children have? In the midst of battling so hard for women's rights (which is a good thing) we don't ask what right our children have. Don't children have a right to a safe development before birth? Don't children have a right to be cared for by their mothers, instead of by daycares and schools (which we know to be substandard at best, and dangerous at worst)? This book, in it's excellent quest for women's liberation, and it's horrible desire to free women from any sort of moral code or responsibility what-so-ever, NEVER stops to think about what children are entitled to expect. They are so unimportant that they are never mentioned. Whatever feminists think should be done with children, you cannot realistically address women's issues without addressing children's issues - they are inseparable!

I appreciate the work of the suffargists, the early feminists, and the later/current feminists as well. I even appreciate what Gloria Steinem and others of her ilk believe they are doing to 'help' women. But I am beginning to wonder if the time hasn't come to create a new word to replace feminist. A word that women like myself can use proudly, without the squirmy feeling that we are aligning ourselves with those who kill babies, toss out all morality, and have zero care for the rights of children. Until feminists like Gloria Steinem learn to hear these issues, many women will never be able to proudly call ourselves feminists. That is the real tradgedy of this book.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: A Mixed Bag
Review: Like so much feminist writing, Gloria Stienem's Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions is a very mixed bag of thought. On the one hand, there are many important issues addressed in this book. Equal pay for equal work, sexual harrassment, the glass ceiling, good health care, and the objectification of women are among some of the topics covered. As this book was written more than a decade ago, it is a shame to see that these issues are still as relevant as they ever were. Gloria Steinem does an excellent job in illustrating these issues with her personal stories. She also has the ability to be very funny as an author, making her reader laugh at the sad ridiculousness of so many things.

Unfortunately, like most feminist literature, this work confuses the liberation and equality with doing whatever one wants. Abortion, of course, is the worst example of this. The author is always careful to defend a woman's right 'to choose' but never actually comes out to say what she is 'choosing'. The choice is to end a human life - even science argees with that! An embryo (because pro-abortionists claim that an embryo is not a fetus, and therefore not human, until after the first trimester(and even that they cannot agree upon, some say it is earlier some say later)) has a separate DNA code from either it's mother or it's father, or any other human being on the planet. Using high-resolution imaging, at three weeks from conception (when most women would be finding out that they are pregnant and arranging for thier abortion, if that is their 'choice') you can visibly see a head, eyes, ears, body, spine, and the beginning of hands and feet. Scientists have tried, and failed, to come up with a specific date at which the fetus becomes human (therefore creating a date at which it is inhuman before that). There is no longer any scientific doubt as to whether a conception is human. Clearly abortion is killing. Feminism will never do women any good until we stop this evil thing. Abortion does not only kill babies, it hurts women. Over and over studies have shown that women who have had abortions wish that they had not. Many are seriously damaged both mentally and emotionally. Abortion also hurts women's bodies. Every abortion a woman has doubles her chance of premature birth with subsequent pregnancies. Abortion also damages the uterus and can make it impossible for a woman to conceive. Abortion is also implicated in some types of reproductive cancers. How can this be good for women?

This book, like much feminine work, also encourages a 'do what you wanna do' type philosophy. Anything that makes a woman feel good is no longer disallowed. Sex outside of marriage, working when you have small children, easy divorce, etc. The author's justifications for these things seem to be two-fold 1.The 'everyone else is doing it' mentality. Didn't our mothers teach us better than that? 2.Men have been getting away with it, so we should, too! I would like to hope that just because men do something that is wrong (like have sex outside of marriage) that this doesn't make it ok. Doing something bad, just because we can, doesn't help us. It only brings us down to their level.

Finally, one of the most disturbing things about this book is the question that isn't asked - What rights to children have? In the midst of battling so hard for women's rights (which is a good thing) we don't ask what right our children have. Don't children have a right to a safe development before birth? Don't children have a right to be cared for by their mothers, instead of by daycares and schools (which we know to be substandard at best, and dangerous at worst)? This book, in it's excellent quest for women's liberation, and it's horrible desire to free women from any sort of moral code or responsibility what-so-ever, NEVER stops to think about what children are entitled to expect. They are so unimportant that they are never mentioned. Whatever feminists think should be done with children, you cannot realistically address women's issues without addressing children's issues - they are inseparable!

I appreciate the work of the suffargists, the early feminists, and the later/current feminists as well. I even appreciate what Gloria Steinem and others of her ilk believe they are doing to 'help' women. But I am beginning to wonder if the time hasn't come to create a new word to replace feminist. A word that women like myself can use proudly, without the squirmy feeling that we are aligning ourselves with those who kill babies, toss out all morality, and have zero care for the rights of children. Until feminists like Gloria Steinem learn to hear these issues, many women will never be able to proudly call ourselves feminists. That is the real tradgedy of this book.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Gloria, and more gloria
Review: Many of her earlier books were more invative. Mostly rehash of old ideas, lacks innovative ideas. Other books are better use of time. Very disappointed!

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: Gloria, and more gloria
Review: Mostly rehash of old ideas covered in her other books. Other books are better use of time.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: An Act of Rebellion
Review: Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions is an interesting book for both men and women. Many women will be able to relate to this book, espically older women who can remember what it was like before feminisim became a major political power. I,myself, am to young to remember that time but reading this book helps me understand why my mother pushes for me to be an indepedent women. I espically loved the essay called "If Men Could Menstrate." It was a funny look at how it would be if the roles were reversed. And sadly very true. This book shows the reality of what it is like to be a women in yesterday and todays worlds.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Thank god for Gloria.
Review: There was often grumbling in certain circles that Gloria Steinem had so much attention paid to her because she was pretty. If that was the only factor, Steinem's popularity would have waned, not because she lost her looks (she never did) but because of the fickleness of the media and the "next pretty face." Steinem is smart, brave, funny and a damn good writer. "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions", her 1983 book of collected essays proves it in spades.

In early 1993, I had the privilege of seeing Gloria Steinem speak at Mount Holyoke College. I had to take the bus from UMASS to get there, and the place was packed. They closed the doors at one point saying it was too full, but they ended up letting most people in. When Ms. Steinem took the stage, she urged all those who were standing in the back to come up and join her onstage so that they could sit. This is the kindness and warmth that Steinem raidates. Many people in the audience were clutching copies of her books for her to sign. As this was the era of "Revolution from Within," that book was everywhere. But I also saw many copies of "Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions" as well. By then the book was 10 years old, but I can understand why people held onto it. This is a great book of essays written over the years. The book touches upon topics such as abortion rights, Jackie Onassis, Alice Walker, Steinem's college reunion, Steinem's own relationship with her mother and the famous expose of Steinem's undercover work at the Playboy Club in the early 60's. Having a journalism background, Steinem's prose is clear and concise. This is no rhetoric-filled theory-based polemic, but a balanced and fair look at the world from the perspective of an extraordinary woman. Also included in this collection is the wonderfully wry, "If Men Could Menstruate." The second edition of this book has some updated comments from Steinem that reflect on the essays more than a decade after the book was published.

For all those who condemn feminism yet really know nothing about it, read this book. For those who are looking for a book of unique, well-written and enlightening essays, read this book. For those of us who discovered this book long ago and have fond memories, read it again.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Gives a wonderful view of feminism as seen by Gloria Steinem
Review: This book is a collection of essays written by Gloria Steinem. They give incredible insight into feminism and the women's movement from an insider's view. Ms. Steinem gives us much to think about in this superb piece of literature


<< 1 2 3 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates