perros
ACCESO USUARIOS |Email Contraseña No recuerdo mi contraseña Inciar sesión en Perros.com|No estás registrado? Regístrate Registrate en Perros.com
Foro de Montas
Montas

All the single ladies rebecca

Moderadores: Damzel, sandrarf
Usuario Titulo: All the single ladies rebecca

evasingle

¡Adicto Total!
PuntuaciónPuntuaciónPuntuaciónPuntuaciónPuntuación
2709 mensajes
Sin foto
0 Albumes (0 fotos)
0 perros (0 fotos)

Sexo: Hombre
Edad: 24 años
Provincia: Matam
Publicado: Tuesday 07 de April de 2026, 12:17
Hello, Guest!

Article about all the single ladies rebecca:
Short Takes: Provocations on Public Feminism, an online-first feature of Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society , offers brief comments from
Rebecca Traister’s All the Single Ladies. Short Takes: Provocations on Public Feminism, an online-first feature of Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society , offers brief comments from prominent feminists about a book that has shaped popular conversations about feminist issues. This forum will also appear in print in the Summer 2017 issue of Signs .

Click here for All the single ladies rebecca


All the Single Ladies was published in 2016 by Simon and Schuster. Short Takes: Rebecca Traister's All the Single Ladies. Surveying the Singles Beat Kate Bolick. It’s Great to Be Young Nancy F. Cott. The Urgent Need for a Singles Studies Discipline Bella DePaulo. Great Stories about Ladies without Partners Barbara J. Risman. Our Work Is Never Done Judith Stacey. Surveying the Singles Beat. Kate Bolick. In 2000, when I started musing on single women as a historical archetype, I had no idea that this niche preoccupation would someday come to have wide appeal. I was simply curious to know why, here in this new millennium, popular culture took such a dim view of single women, portraying them as either dating-obsessed shopaholics (Carrie Bradshaw) or binge-eating lonely hearts (Bridget Jones). Where had the proudly unmarried New Women of the 1890s gone? In 2011, while reporting a cover story for The Atlantic about changing marriage trends and the rising single demographic, I discovered an answer: society was still threatened by single women. For the first time in history, unmarried people outnumbered the married, and many were quite happy to be single—which I know because after that article, called “All the Single Ladies” (thank you, Beyoncé), went viral, I heard from quite a few of them, writing to express their gratitude for finally seeing themselves represented in a mainstream magazine. I was also approached by several publishers about expanding the article into a book, and though I believed a book-length journalistic exploration of single women today was necessary and important, it wasn’t one I wanted to write. So I was relieved when, around that time, I first met Rebecca Traister—we’d been invited to speak together on the topic—and learned that she was already on the case, freeing me to take a different, far more idiosyncratic approach to the demographic shift that captivated us both, one that would, I hoped, reach those readers who are inspired to think deeply about their place in the world through the absorbing pull of narrative and the indirect movement of essay rather than the direct address of journalism. (Also, I wanted to discard the role of talking head as quickly as possible.) The result, Spinster , a very personal blend of memoir, biography, reporting, and cultural history that charts my own coming into adulthood at a time when public conversation around singledom was at a low and shows the parallels between single women at the turn of the nineteenth century and the turn of the twentieth, came out last year. I learned a great deal during my singles research, but the most unexpected discovery was how many books on the topic had already been published, whether humorous, how-to, contemporary and journalistic, or historical and academic. Just a sampling: in 1901 there was Myrtle Reed’s The Spinster Book , the 1930s inspired Marjorie Hillis’s Live Alone and Like It , the 1950s introduced Elaine Dundy’s single-gal chick-lit prototype, The Dud Avocado , the 1960s had Helen Gurley Brown’s famous Sex and the Single Girl , the 1970s saw Marie Edwards and Eleanor Hoover’s The Challenge of Being Single , Margaret Adams’s Single Blessedness , and June Sochen’s The New Woman , the 1980s had Nancy L. Peterson’s Our Lives for Ourselves , Barbara Levy Simon’s Never Married Women, and Lee Virginia Chambers-Schiller’s Liberty, a Better Husband . In the early 2000s, the deluge began: Betsy Israel’s The Bachelor Girl , Naomi Braun Rosenthal’s Spinster Tales and Womanly Possibilities , E. Kay Trimberger’s, The New Single Woman , Eric Klinenberg’s Going Solo , and, most conspicuously, two deeply thoughtful books about the contemporary single condition, along with a library’s worth of papers, blog posts, and articles exploring the subject from an endless variety of angles, by social psychologist Bella DePaulo, all of which led me to designate her, in my Atlantic article, “America’s foremost writer and thinker on the single experience.” Traister’s contribution to this literature, All the Single Ladies , like a college survey class on the topic, is reasonable and comprehensive, showing the ways in which the single experience can vary according to race, class, geographical region, and sexual orientation.













All the single ladies rebecca


All the single ladies rebecca traister summary


All the single ladies traister
Denunciar mensaje Citar


conectados
Usuarios conectados
Tenemos 0 usuarios conectados. 0 invitados y 0 miembro/s:

Enlaces link Razas de perros|Foro de Perros|Venta perros|Adiestramiento perros|Adopciones de perros
Razas destacadas link Pastor alemán|Bulldog|Bull terrier|Yorkshire|Boxer|San bernardo|Schnauzer|Golden Retriever|Doberman|Labrador Retriever
Copyright © 1997-2015 Perros.com - Todos los derechos reservados
Publicidad en Perros.com| |Aviso Legal|Política de privacidad|Condiciones de uso