Imatge de l'autor
9+ obres 4,531 Membres 54 Ressenyes 5 preferits

Sobre l'autor

Susan Faludi is an American journalist and author, was born in 1959. She graduated from Harvard University. In 1991, she won a Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Journalism. Her work can be read in numerous publications, including The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The New Yorker, The Los mostra'n més Angeles Times, and The Nation. She is the author of Backlash: The Undeclared War Against Women and the winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Nonfiction, The Terror Dream: Myth and Misogyny in an Insecure America, and In the Darkroom, which won the 2016 Kirkus Prize for nonfiction. (Bowker Author Biography) mostra'n menys

Inclou aquests noms: S Faludi, Susan Faludi

Crèdit de la imatge: Jan Ainali

Obres de Susan Faludi

Obres associades

The Women's Room (1977) — Epíleg, algunes edicions1,976 exemplars
Complaints and Disorders: The Sexual Politics of Sickness (1973) — Introducció, algunes edicions234 exemplars
No Future for You: Salvos from The Baffler (2014) — Col·laborador — 28 exemplars

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Susan Faludi takes on the conservative bastards in the media and shows us how quickly it abandons years of feminism in order to cling to our mythological cowboy beginnings.
 
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mslibrarynerd | Hi ha 10 ressenyes més | Jan 13, 2024 |
Ms. Faludi tackles economics, culture, pychology and gender. She addresses the collapes of the American New Deal, the expectations of the Boomers, the shocks of overshoring and outsourcing manufacturing and the disappearance of the jobs that had supported a hope of affluance for the working and middle classes. She assumes that the popular psychology of the late 20th century is right - that men lack hope and self-respect, and can blame society and absent fathers for their unhappiness but instead lash out against women and others. Her stories of the collapse of the aircraft building industries and shipyards of southern California are solid, and the manouevers of the fans millionaire owners of the NFL Cleveland Browsn, although I do not agree with the pop psychology that permeates her analysis. Whileshe writes fairly respectfully about working class men, she maintains they have a false consciousness (i.e. they are deluded to think that traditional male occupations - making things and fighing wars matters - what matters is making money). She writes well about some books, writers, movies, producers and actors famous or somewhat popular in the 80s and 90s.… (més)
 
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BraveKelso | Hi ha 5 ressenyes més | Feb 14, 2022 |
A remarkable exploration of identity - gender, national, religious and other.

What are the chances that the father of a noted feminist scholar will decide to fly to Thailand for gender reassignment surgeries? That she will do so skipping over the psychiatric and medical therapies that typically precede surgery? That she will do so without sharing her gender dysmorphia, or her surgical plan with anyone in advance? And if you are a feminist scholar how do you respond when your father embraces a binary view of gender, declares that she is a woman and then behaves in accord with ridiculous stereotypes about what it means to be a woman, being submissive and matching your shoes to your purse and waiting for men to open doors? These things are of course entirely performative and have nothing to do with what it means to be a woman. But that leads to the question "what does it mean to be a woman?"

It turns out though that this is only the very tip of the iceberg in this exploration of identity. Faludi's father was a Hungarian Jew in the 1930's and 40's. He hid by passing as a member of what was essentially the Hungarian Gestapo while his neighbors and classmates were murdered all around him. Faludi's father then fled, first to Brazil and then to the US, and decided he was not a Jew. He immersed himself in regular listening to all the 1970s and 80's televangelists, placing the biggest star on the block on the family's Christmas tree right in the front window of their home. And then Faludi's father, in his later years after his divorce, returned to his native Hungary. After a time went to Thailand and had MtF gender conforming surgeries and began identifying female. She then returned to Hungary where she disparaged Jews and supported a far right anti-semetic and anti-LGBTQ+ strongmen. She proclaimed often and intensely that she was not a Jew she was a Hungarian and she was not trans she was a woman. After all her paperwork says so. Faludi's journey, amidst all of this, to explore the meaning and structure of identity is illuminating and fascinating.

Faludi does this while also navigating her identity as a daughter to this very difficult parent. Stephanie is narcististic and cruel, likely dealing with PTSD (which she denies.) She walks all over everyone. She also abused Faludi's mother and tried to stab to death her mother's boyfriend (they were long separated and embroiled in a a protracted divorce.) It is a lot to unpack, but Faludi does it masterfully. She explores the personal while also keeping the narrative focused on the larger truths and lessons. There is a good deal of discussion of Erik Erikson's theory (he himself a self-denying Jew who changed his name to the most Aryan possible construction) that when we feel the loss of identity we are drawn to things certain and brutal, that we build new identity around pegs like racism and anti-Semitism. (In the book this discussion is focused on Hungary, but it applies everywhere and it resonated with me, especially in light of the 2016 election, Charlottesville, and the coup attempt on the Capitol.)

I recommend this book for everyone. It is truly extraordinary, and provides a structure to think about that most universal of subjective truths, identity,
… (més)
 
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Narshkite | Hi ha 15 ressenyes més | Jan 5, 2022 |
One day, out of the blue, journalist Susan Faludi received an email from her estranged father, coyly announcing that he had gone to Thailand and had a sex-change operation. He was now Stefanie. How this squared with the macho mountain climber, wood worker, and explosively angry parent she had known was a question that drove her to fly to Hungary, where her father had repatriated himself after years in the U.S., to find out exactly who this person was.

Over the years, as she investigates her newly created parent, we learn about her life, her father's life during and after WWII, the history of Hungary, her parents' marriage, a somewhat surprisingly far-flung and never-met collection of relatives, and the state of Hungary under Viktor Orban, which continues today.

Faludi accepts her father's change, and refers to her father using the feminine pronouns throughout the book, which sometimes can create reader dissonance. Finally she resorts to introducing Stefanie as her mother. But she never questions his decision. Rather, she reports what she can, what he is willing to tell her, show her, or let her deduce.

In some ways this is an intimate story, but Susan's father keeps her such a teasing distance, tells such contradictory stories, that she and we her readers are indeed in the darkroom, hoping a recognizable picture emerges. What we do find out about her father and his family, and about Hungary, is well worth the exploration.
… (més)
 
Marcat
ffortsa | Hi ha 15 ressenyes més | Nov 5, 2021 |

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Joan Smith Preface
Paul Burgess Cover artist
Ylva Stålmarck Translator
Emeli André Translator

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Obres
9
També de
3
Membres
4,531
Popularitat
#5,542
Valoració
3.9
Ressenyes
54
ISBN
87
Llengües
12
Preferit
5

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