Reviews tagging 'Misogyny'

Butts: A Backstory by Heather Radke

12 reviews

kelly_e's review

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informative reflective medium-paced

3.25

Title: Butts: A Backstory
Author: Heather Radke
Genre: Non Fiction
Rating: 3.25
Pub Date: November 29, 2022

T H R E E • W O R D S

Interesting • Thoughtful • Cheeky

📖 S Y N O P S I S

Whether we love them or hate them, think they’re sexy, think they’re strange, consider them too big, too small, or anywhere in between, humans have a complicated relationship with butts. It is a body part unique to humans, critical to our evolution and survival, and yet it has come to signify so much more: sex, desire, comedy, shame. A woman’s butt, in particular, is forever being assessed, criticized, and objectified, from anxious self-examinations trying on jeans in department store dressing rooms to enduring crass remarks while walking down a street or high school hallways. But why?

💭 T H O U G H T S

Butts was never on my TBR until it was selected as one of the featured curated titles for the A-Z challenge in my online book club. Would I have read it otherwise? Probably not. Did it make me pause and offer up moments of reflection? Absolutely.

This cultural history covers a lot of ground - nearly 200 years of cultural, evolutionary, political and anatomical history of the butt, particularly the female butt. I don't think I have ever really took such significant time to reflect on everything the female butt has come to symbolize. I enjoyed getting an in-depth look into how trends have changed over time and the aspects that have helped changed these standards over the eras. There are quite a few pop culture references and talk about the butts that have defined modern generations.

Butts is definitely a unique look into one specific body part, and I would highly recommend the audio, which reads like an in-depth report. I am not sure if I would be able to get through eye-ball reading such a book. It may have been a step outside of something I would normally read, yet it has sparked a different kind of awareness into the sexualization of butts that I think will stick with me.

📚 R E A D • I F • Y O U • L I K E
• cultural history
• investigative reporting
• butts

⚠️ CW: racism, cultural appropriation, body shaming, fatphobia, misogyny, sexism, classism, colonization, slavery, eating disorder, sexual assault, medical content, medical trauma 

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jrae_miller's review against another edition

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informative reflective medium-paced

4.5

A really entertaining look at the butt through history! I think the author kind of lost the thread of the book by the end, but it's possible that it just felt like a lot of repetition for me by the time I got there. I think there would be plenty more to write and read on the subject in the future!

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sophia_'s review

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informative fast-paced

4.25


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bookobsessedmommy's review

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informative reflective sad medium-paced

4.5

I saw Butts on the GRCA, and was intrigued by the title.  Radke takes us on very interesting history lesson with tons of intersectionality. I was pleasantly surprised by how much scientific and sociological research was presented, and how well it all tied together. There were a lot of stories I'd heard in part before, like Sara Baartman, but getting more of the details brought into stark relief how long female bodies, especially black female bodies, have been objectified and moralized and how it never stops. The reality is sobering but also freeing in a way. 

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zombiezami's review

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emotional funny informative lighthearted reflective medium-paced

4.25

This was very thoughtfully researched, organized, and written. I learned a lot and enjoyed this so much. My one suggestion that would have taken this from good to great would be if the author had included a chapter on trans women on HRT, and the range of feelings they have about estrogen changing their bodies. It could also cover queer beauty standards and how transphobia impacts body shaming, including butt shaming.

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jourdanicus's review

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Interesting so far, but I wasn't engaged enough to see it through. Might finish someday. (Content warnings are for topics discussed, not anything wrong the author said.)

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booksoflore's review

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informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

4.0


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stevia333k's review

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dark emotional funny informative inspiring reflective sad tense medium-paced

5.0

So over the month I was reading this, I had read other books which I could've gotten confused with this book, but fortunately I was able to remember that if the thing I read was connected to butts then it's about this book.

So this book is a mix of topics kind of, from anatomy, to discussion of exercise tapes, military uniforms, fashion, fame, and of course racism. So the book had both humor & grief.

That being said, since I wasn't part of the diet culture of the fashion/uniform magazines, this book was lovely at filling in info about celebrities such as Kate Moss, J Lo, Beyonce, Paris Hilton, Kim Kardashian. (Again, I was out of the loop on that partly due to youth, partly due to having a different local, etc.)

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erebus53's review

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challenging emotional informative reflective sad medium-paced

3.0

Any sociopolitical commentary on body image and fashion is likely to be a bit navel-gazey.. and backward looking.. but parts of this are a bit far up its own butt.

The first few chapters of this book, while offering very little to anyone who already knows a bit about evolution, are a solid exploration of the physiology and selection pressures that probably lead to the development of the unique human bottom. I was getting my hopes up when Radke champions the scientific expectation that the conclusions should be based on the data, rather than hunting through information to find proofs for useful ideas you have had; I had hoped that this book was going to say interesting things that I hadn't heard before.

We are introduced to a history lesson of Sarah Baartman, a South African woman who was used as a freakshow act because of her large bum and dark skin. She was called the "Hottentot Venus" and became an iconic stereotype (whose remains were defiled and displayed in museums for years after her death). A lot of the exploration of beauty norms and White centric fashion is unpacked by looking at the Bustle and other clothing items, designed to enlarge the bottom... but I think that Radke is reaching when she tries to equate the use of sexualised bum padding in dresses in "trying to look like a Black woman" or cultural misappropriation. She seems to have hunted for a while to find any record of these ideas being linked, and has found one article in an Irish publication where a journalist cracks a joke about it. If this is cherry-picking your sources, that cherry may in fact be a dried sourcherry.. not really satisfying any proof of your clever idea.

From eugenics to Mylie Cyrus, from Mix-A-Lot to Kate Moss, bespoke fashion to production-line sweatshops, and Late Stage Capitalism, this book tells a story of marketing, status, Colonization, and the control of women's bodies by men, women, and society in general. There are a lot of good points made, and so much {White people doing cringey stuff}, and sick, awful stuff. Apparently this book was banned in some places. I can't see any good reason because it's not what I would call inflammatory, but then, 
I don't tend to buy into a lot of normalised beliefs, and I don't think that people with the most power necessarily get there because they are good.

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mmccombs's review

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informative reflective medium-paced

3.5

Very enjoyable if a little surface level. I have never really thought about butts on a sociocultural level, so this did get the wheels turning, but it’s definitely far from being the most robust research on the topic. While I think the author did a good, mindful job about teasing out the racial and gendered aspects to butts and body image just generally, I do think it’s just missing some detail (and perhaps lived experience) to make it feel a bit more comprehensive. A good pop-science read to get you started thinking about butts more (and I guess less) critically.

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