Unfinished business : sex, freedom and misogyny / Anna Goldsworthy.
Series: Quarterly essay (Melbourne, Vic.) ; issue 50 (2013).Publication details: Colliingwood, Vic. : Black Inc., [2013].Description: 126 p. : ill. ; 24 cmISBN:- 1863956026 (pbk)
- 9781863956024 (paperback)
- 1832-0953
- QE 50 2013 [Running title]
- 2000 - 2099
- Women's rights -- Australia
- Women's rights
- Misogyny -- Australia
- Women -- Social life and customs -- 21st century
- Women -- Australia -- Social conditions -- 21st century
- Women in technology
- Women -- Australia -- Social life and customs -- History -- 21st century
- Women -- Social life and customs -- Twenty-first century
- Feminism -- Australia
- Women -- Social life and customs -- 21st century
- Women, Rights of
- Women -- Australia -- Social conditions -- History -- 21st century
- Women -- Social life and customs -- Australia
- Women -- Australia -- Social life and customs -- 21st century
- Misogyny
- Women -- Social life and customs -- 21st century
- Women's rights
- Misogyny
- Women -- Social life and customs
- Women's rights
- Australian
- 305.42 23
- HQ
- Also available electronically, via the journal.
Item type | Home library | Call number | Vol info | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item reserves | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Magazine | Melbourne Athenaeum Library | QE50 -- 2013 / 50 | Jun 2013 | Available | Unfinished business by Anna Goldsworthy | 054126 |
Cover title.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 70-79)
Includes correspondence : Andrew Charlton, Jim Chalmers, Peter Brent, Russell Marks, Guy Rundle, Louise Tarrant, Troy Bramston, Nicholas Reece, Mark Latham.
Read by Louise Crawford.
Western women today have unprecedented freedom and power. In Australia we have a female prime minister and governor-general; women are at the forefront of almost every area of public life. Yet when Julia Gillard?s misogyny speech ricocheted around the world, it clearly touched a nerve. Why? For young women in particular, it is both rewarding and confusing. What cultural messages do they receive about work and home, about sex and their bodies? Why do so many reject the feminist label? And why does pop culture wink at us with storylines featuring submissive women, from Mad Men to 50 Shades of Grey to the darker recesses of pornography? With piercing insight, Anna Goldsworthy lays bare the dilemmas of being a woman today and asks how women can truly become free agents.
Also available electronically, via the journal.