Reviews

Beauty and Misogyny: Harmful Cultural Practices in the West by Sheila Jeffreys

candyshadow's review

Go to review page

3.0

Some parts were good and others were really bad.

alishaduh's review

Go to review page

3.0

I really appreciated a lot of what this book had to say and calling out the harmful industries targeting women. It's hard to rate this as I agreed with half of it and completely disagreed with the other half (I skipped the terf chapter, I do not support that crap).

leelulah's review

Go to review page

4.0

This book was more than I was expecting in many senses. I do not agree with her interpretations of Christianity, but I do sure agree that many beauty practices directed towards women are influenced by prostitution and pornography, and she's quick to criticize the liberal movement for it. This is sure some level of awareness worth mentioning in the Left. Especially relevant for its callout of Bill Clinton's positive attitude towards the sex industry (and women in the US were supposed to vote for his wife, in order to advance the cause of women's rights).

A lot of information here is very shocking in terms of what women have to go through as a result of labiaplasty, feet surgery, feet binding, breast implants, prostitution and pornography industries, and the rise of the transvestite / transsexual fetish championed as a human right.

Do not expect a simply "quit wearing makeup because the patriarchy", but also a good study of how the modeling and the makeup industry have close ties to pedophiles. Maybe, many of you will think that we didn't need a radical feminist to tell us this, and maybe you're right, but for some reason she's only one of the few who's speaking against this instead of calling it "warpaint" and "empowerment" if it's "chosen".

As any radical feminist, she's pro-abortion, but her dismantling of the choice discourse could prove useful to dismantle the abortion myths mantained by the contradictions of her position. Studying radical feminst thought remains an interesting pursuit, partly because of honest books like this.

clementine_lips's review

Go to review page

informative reflective sad slow-paced

4.0

ltyagenda's review

Go to review page

informative medium-paced
toda mujer debería de leerlo, sumamente importante

michipez's review

Go to review page

challenging dark reflective slow-paced

3.75

siaolin's review

Go to review page

4.0

While I couldn't quite get behind some of Jeffreys discussions about transgenderism, this is a good read nonetheless.

effervescent's review

Go to review page

informative reflective medium-paced

4.0

tashtonnes's review

Go to review page

3.0

Honestly regardless of the ideology this was such an amazing reading experience. I was googling things (if anyone is tracing my internet usage and history I'm sorry for the ... alarming searches), having a perpetual internal debate and pacing around my room thinking about this book and my own opinions

I really adored that the writing style for this book was so simple and straightforward which allows your time and focus to be devoted to the actual content, rather than having to google obscure jargon- yet as an academic work it still cited sources frequently and correctly

Soo, this is a work of radical feminism so naturally there were tonnes of things I agreed with... and tonnes that I.. did not agree with

The book focuses around beauty practices in the West (obviously). Jeffreys asserts that beauty practices in the West (and more or less everywhere else) all stem from male oppression. Beauty practices are used to create and assert sexual differences between men and women (also look I feel like Jeffreys was perpetually conflating sex and gender but whatever). This is done to 'other' women, to identify them and mould them into a submissive sex (gender). Beauty practices are not only used to subdue women but also to reduce them to sexual objects. So beauty practices are driven by male sexuality and male fetishes. This is seen through the impact that prostitution has upon beauty standards and practices. Beauty practices have become evermore extreme and constraining as women continue to obtain 'more' rights. The beauty practices are used to reassure men of their ever dominant status over women. Jeffreys equates beauty practices in the West to what the UN defines as harmful cultural practices. These harmful beauty practices in the West have been exacerbated by the free market, capitalism, postmodernism, the sexual revolution/liberation and the West's continual refusal to acknowledge its own culture, and that it in fact does possess culture. Postmodern ideologies and liberal feminists have asserted that it is a woman's right to be able to choose to engage in sexual (gendered) practices, as these practices are no longer or never were innately linked to male dominance. Jeffreys argues that the practices that these women 'choose' to engage in are innately damaging and patriarchal and in fact women do not possess the freedom to choose these practices. Western culture of male dominance compels them to perform these harmful acts of femininity. So Jeffreys calls for the UN to ban western beauty practices, for women to stop performing them and for sexual difference (gender) to be abolished.

Ok so this is the watered down gist of what is a very extreme and opinionated book.. I haven't touched upon chapter three which discusses trans people and as Jeffreys wants to abolish sex (gender) .. it's not a very trans inclusive chapter. So I mean.. there are lots of #problematic aspects to this book. Although I think those aspects were part of what made it such an interesting reading experience for me, as there were things that I agreed with, and things that I did not. When the things that I disagreed with were logical extensions of what I did agree with I had to stop and seriously think if Jeffreys' logic was wrong, or if I actually did agree or disagree with her. So I think I'll be doing a lot of soul searching for a while (esp. about the concept of choice)

acidic's review

Go to review page

4.0

every day i hate men more and more. i truly appreciate this book and the insights it has given me.