Overview
Letters to a Young Feminist By Phyllis Chesler"A warm, personal, political, irresistible guide for young feminists, women and men . . . Chesler marks with flowers of wisdom the path she helped clear, and offers advice to those who will extend it into a future only they can know." -Gloria Steinem ISBN: 1-56858-151-3
Synopsis
Phyllis Chesler's Letters to a Young Feminist is a visionary call to action from a leading feminist revolutionary. Weaving personal experiences into her account of the movement's history, Chesler discusses the fundamentals of feminism, assesses the accomplishments and failures of her generation, and encourages the inheritors of the movement to tackle all that remains to be done.
Publishers Weekly
A call to arms in epistolary form, this is an evenhanded if occasionally polemical assessment of the feminist movement's accomplishments and what remains to be done before a feminist vision of society can be realized. Chesler (Women and Madness) doesn't mince words when detailing the ways in which women's lives are still circumscribed by cultural conventions, but her empathetic tone mitigates against angry self-righteousness or condemnation of antifeminists. On the contrary, while she insists that a proactive feminist movement is essential to the well-being of all women, Chesler also argues that feminists themselves must renew their efforts to be sympathetic to a wide range of viewpoints and agendas. Above all, she stresses feminism should stand for tolerance, self-empowerment and resistance to all forms of oppression. She covers a lot of groundmarriage, reproductive rights, sexual abuse, political oppression, career opportunitieswhich necessarily makes for cursory treatment of many topics. Yet Chesler's analysis is cogent throughout, and these essays are laced with compelling nuggets from one who has been on the front lines of the feminist movement for several decades.
Editorials
From Barnes & Noble
The Barnes & Noble ReviewMarch 1998
In Letters to a Young Feminist, Phyllis Chesler challenges youthful feminists to stop thinking of "feminism" as a word from the dusty past and reclaim it for their own lives. Indicting the contradictions between expectations of men and women, she reminds us that despite decades of women in the workplace, traditional stereotypes still play out. Behind every father lauded for changing a diaper, she notes, there is a mother just doing her job β putting in 40 hours at work and an additional 40 hours at home β who is rarely even credited. What do boys learn about women's roles?
In this latest book, Chesler eschews any restrictive definition of feminism and instead embraces a philosophy that insists upon the equality of all people. In her final letter, Chesler speaks to her own feminist son, offering practical encouragement and requesting that he β and the generations to come β send her "postcards from the future."
Publishers Weekly -
A call to arms in epistolary form, this is an evenhanded if occasionally polemical assessment of the feminist movement's accomplishments and what remains to be done before a feminist vision of society can be realized. Chesler (Women and Madness) doesn't mince words when detailing the ways in which women's lives are still circumscribed by cultural conventions, but her empathetic tone mitigates against angry self-righteousness or condemnation of antifeminists. On the contrary, while she insists that a proactive feminist movement is essential to the well-being of all women, Chesler also argues that feminists themselves must renew their efforts to be sympathetic to a wide range of viewpoints and agendas. Above all, she stresses feminism should stand for tolerance, self-empowerment and resistance to all forms of oppression. She covers a lot of groundmarriage, reproductive rights, sexual abuse, political oppression, career opportunitieswhich necessarily makes for cursory treatment of many topics. Yet Chesler's analysis is cogent throughout, and these essays are laced with compelling nuggets from one who has been on the front lines of the feminist movement for several decades.Booknews
This book represents an older feminist's efforts to pass on what she has learned to the next generation. Chesler (psychology and women's studies, College of Staten Island) discusses the basic aspects of feminism, explains its relevance in a world that is in danger of taking it for granted, and examines sisterhood, sex, families, motherhood, resistance to the status quo, work, and the economics of power. She is careful to include males in the new generation of feminists, with the last letter written to her son. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.Kim France
Part memoir, part manifesto, Letters to a Young Feminist is Chesler's attempt to pass on the kind of wisdom that she and so many women of her generation were left to figure out as they went along.--Kim France, The New York Times Book Review