Reviews

Accidental Feminists by Jane Caro

angiolettolizreads's review against another edition

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4.0

Read this on the train from Cornwall back to London. I loved her voice and wit, especially how she referred to men as blokes- just made it all that funky. Very insightful yet concise. A very intelligent and confidant woman with a lot of important opinions and life experience. A great read

tricky's review

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5.0

In ‘The Accidental Feminist’ Jane Caro dissects how women currently in the 55-year plus range became both liberated and shackled through the contraceptive pill, the tampon and the pay check.
For those who are not aware Jane Caro is a social commentator, author, columnist and business woman who utilises a diverse range of media platforms to highlight a broad range of issues. I have always enjoyed watching Jane appear on shows like The Drum’ and enjoy her no nonsense, straight up, slap you in the face opinions. I was rather chuffed, to be offered the opportunity to read Jane’s latest book for an honest review.
Caro expertly peels back at how currently women in 55 plus bracket have been able to forge ahead. They are the first generation to receive a pay check, they are the first generation to access the pill, and they are the first generation to have access to the tampon. For those younger readers these may seem like simple achievements but I want you to imagine a world where you do not have the convenience of a tampon and continue to lead your current lifestyle.
The joys of earning your own wage have been tainted by the inability to plan for retirement. It is this group of women that Caro turns the torch onto. Having raised their children, worked hard, they find themselves in serious financial hardship with many facing homelessness. This is a growing problem and there is little focus by policy makers to address the issue. With housing prices high, rents high, it will take some clever thinking to find a solution. It these sections of the book that will make many women feel uncomfortable. That as a woman no matter what your age, the ongoing fragility of your financial predicament is going to remain a constant. That having a safe place to live, the ability to be independent could be taken away in a heartbeat through the loss of income, a relationship break up or ill health. It will have you really thinking about your financial future and looking for trustworthy advisor.
Caro explores other issues throughout the book as to how women have been categorised. From being hags, gold-diggers, slags, bossy bitch and dutiful housewives all these terms have been heaped onto women as they move through life. The power of the terminology, how it shapes, defines and continues to be place women into boxes. The continual battle women face that going out at night, having a couple of drinks and dressing in a seemingly provocative way is not an invitation for rape.
There is so much to unpack in this book. I found the chapter ‘Vessels of Repulsion’ extremely thought provoking as Caro explores the ownership of a woman’s body. From how women are told to dress and how to behave when expecting. It certainly highlights the conundrum women find themselves in.
Towards the last couple of chapters you wonder is there an upside as even Caro admits “If you are female, and try to get ahead there will be bigger, wider, deeper and deeper obstacles in your way.” Yet, things are changing; the extraordinarily brave women who have raised their voice through #metoo are having an impact. There is progress talk of quotas in politics, company boards are being discussed. I would say that even the ready acceptance of women’s sport on prime television has been important as has the success of the book Good Night Stories for Rebel Girls’ has provided access to role models for women. The last two chapters bring hope, rebellion and policy to the forefront.
Caro’s writing style is chatty and keeps you engaged. It is extremely well researched and not preachy. Caro lays out the facts, the issues in no nonsense way. Yes, there are parts of this book that are uncomfortable but you need that. There are women out there struggling who have become invisible and Caro rightly brings these issues into the spotlight.
The Accidental Feminist is a celebration of women how much they have achieved and a damning indictment on how much is still to be done.

eliza_v_paige's review

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4.0

4.5

Brilliant!

lolabrigita's review

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5.0

I really enjoyed reading this, as angry as it made me feel. Great reminder of how feminism has affected and served us all, an celebration of the strides that have been made for equality and an acknowledgement of the work that is still to be done.

laurenmarchant's review

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5.0

As a millennial Australian woman, I found this such an essential and empowering read, Caro looks at feminism, how far we have come, the issues that still oppress particularly older women today, whilst giving hope that equality for women can change and has changed in a short period of time.

memily's review

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1.0

DNF @ pg128. Couldn’t chew through the dry, dull writing, as interested as I was in the subject matter.

booksellersdiary's review

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3.0

I love Jane Caro. Her wit, intelligence and not so gentle mockery of trolls on Twitter keep me laughing most days.

But I didn’t love this book as much as I wanted to.

Like Clem Ford’s Boys Will Be Boys, this is Feminism 101 and I realise I am not the target market for this book. I am well versed in feminism, it’s history and the impact of legal changes on both mine and my mothers generation. I understand what the sweeping policy change of the Whitlam government did for Australian women.

Jane, I really wanted to love this. But while reading I wanted more information and suggestion solutions for the women this book was written for. The baby boomer women walking that fine line between relative comfort and abject poverty. I wanted more intersectionality. I wanted more about the impact of the current political environment on those same women, and I wanted you to make at least one mention of how much worse Aboriginal women have it compared to white women. You recognise your privilege, but you seem too removed from those of your generation who are struggling.

Solid 3 stars.

brookemorgan's review

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4.0

I can see where this book might be helpful - maybe for someone more like my mum, not super aware of feminism and also able to relate to more of the content and experiences shared. I think a lot of the work was not necessarily mind blowing, though I can see it’s value for a different audience. Probably a 2.5 stars. A whole star just for the gasp I made when reading the end of chapter 5: Women’s Work.

Ok so updated thoughts, I think I am giving it a 4 star. Mainly because of what Caro touches on in the last few chapters with Superannuation and just general workplace inequalities that lead women to end up being majorly worse off than men once it comes to retirement.

brona's review

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4.0

In 2019, Jane Caro has written a book about the women of her generation (the Baby Boomers) who didn't expect to change the world, but accidentally found that the world they had been brought up to live in, no longer existed. They were the first generation of women to have earned money working for most of their adult lives, and thanks to advances in medicine and technology, were able to take control of their own bodies, in a way that no previous generations could ever have imagined possible.
Full review here - http://bronasbooks.blogspot.com/2019/05/the-vindication-of-accidental-feminists.html
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