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pianokeys's review against another edition
4.5
Moderate: Eating disorder, Lesbophobia, Stalking, Abortion, Gaslighting, Racism, Body shaming, Bullying, Cultural appropriation, Misogyny, Sexism, Toxic relationship, Cursing, Fatphobia, Infidelity, Rape, Sexual assault, Sexual content, Sexual harassment, Sexual violence, Toxic friendship, and Transphobia
cogowno's review against another edition
4.25
Graphic: Sexism and Misogyny
Moderate: Eating disorder and Sexual assault
Minor: Transphobia, Racism, and Abortion
katara42's review against another edition
4.0
Minor: Sexism, Sexual assault, Transphobia, Misogyny, and Sexual harassment
nelldiaz's review against another edition
3.75
Moderate: Rape, Sexism, Ableism, and Racism
Minor: Transphobia, Sexual assault, and Sexual harassment
stephintoadventure's review against another edition
3.75
Minor: Emotional abuse, Domestic abuse, Sexism, Transphobia, Fatphobia, and Racism
charlotteer's review against another edition
5.0
This book allowed me to see certain things in a new light and has lit a fire for me to do better for myself and others. It has held me accountable for my lack of boundaries (people-pleasing), privilege and made me realise the negative behaviours I had (especially when it came to apologies).
Minor: Ableism, Homophobia, Racism, Sexual violence, and Transphobia
Florence Given does give trigger warnings on the chapters that include references to sexual assault.james1star's review against another edition
4.0
- Challenging what we’ve learned and the society we’ve grown up in is hard and uncomfortable but needed for change to occur and the little discomfort is a lot less compared to the injustices, be patient but also call out when appropriate
- Being or making yourself more ‘pretty’ doesn’t make you any less of a feminist because society still values beauty in women highly, different standards for different women e.g. trans, fat, people of colour where additional prejudices are present, acknowledge privileges
- Love yourself, no one really cares about what you’re doing/how you look, why settle when there’s something/one better
- Internalised misogyny prevents progress, ‘flaws’ are MAN-made, beauty standards are fake, healing own insecurities will lead to empathy and viewing other women differently/in a more positive light
- Queer feelings are valid, working though internalised homo/lesbo/bi-phobia, limited and stereotypical views of queerness prevented her from validating feelings, oversaturated heteronormativity in media (it’s ‘hetrifying’), queer women view others via a queer gaze not the typical heterosexual male gaze
- Women can and should enjoy sex too (if they want), reinforces notion they’re passive participants reserved for men’s desires, normalised discomfort forces queer women to repress their feelings
- Asking for consent > sexual assault, shows maturity and it’s the law, providing the option of not doing anything, need to learn this before sexual violence takes place, set and keep boundaries
- Can’t teach how to avoid sexual assault because it’s never your fault, rape culture, ‘preventative’ measures women take when that’s not the problem, it’s physically impossibly to “ask” for rape, openly discuss sexual violence from a young age to avoid it becoming normalised/accepted, rape’s the only crime where the victim is treated/questioned like the perpetrator, inconsistencies with reporting and sentencing
- The price women pay for existing (so many adjustments, additional expenses, etc), spend money/energy keeping safe from men but paid less, standards are set by the hetero male gaze, ‘flaws’ generated by capitalist standards of beauty, still not that safe being visibly queer, women are meant to be sexy but when she uses this ‘power’ that’s a bad thing, how shame is used to put women down, sexual gaze thrusted on woman’s bodies (school uniform, nipples, etc)
- It’s okay and ‘normal’ to feel heartbroken, hard to quit people completely in our social media world, how to recover, craving romance doesn’t make you any less of a feminist
Moderate: Sexism, Sexual assault, Misogyny, and Sexual violence
Minor: Biphobia, Rape, Lesbophobia, Transphobia, Homophobia, Racism, Fatphobia, Sexual content, and Eating disorder
readingpumpkins's review against another edition
2.5
Graphic: Sexism and Misogyny
Moderate: Toxic relationship, Transphobia, and Rape
Minor: Sexual assault, Sexual harassment, Biphobia, Sexual violence, and Fatphobia
it speaks about these topics in a feminist contextliv_txt's review against another edition
4.0
Moderate: Eating disorder, Lesbophobia, Outing, Racism, Rape, Sexism, Sexual harassment, Sexual assault, Homophobia, Mental illness, Sexual violence, and Transphobia
wintah's review against another edition
3.5
Moderate: Biphobia, Misogyny, Lesbophobia, Classism, Racism, Homophobia, Toxic relationship, Gaslighting, Sexual harassment, Fatphobia, Ableism, Transphobia, Sexual assault, Sexism, Cultural appropriation, and Eating disorder
Minor: Rape