What she said : conversations about equality / Elizabeth Renzetti.
Material type: TextPublication details: [Toronto] : McClelland & Stewart, 2024.Edition: 1st edDescription: 279 p. ; 22 cmISBN:- 9780771010101 (hardcover)
- 305.420971 23
Item type | Current library | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds | |
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300 - 399 | West Grey Durham Branch Shelves | Non-fiction | 305.42 REN (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Checked out | 11/19/2024 | 33321003252591 |
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305.42 PRA All in her head : how gender bias harms women's mental health / | 305.42 RAT My body / | 305.42 REE Stuff mom never told you : the feminist past, present, and future / | 305.42 REN What she said : conversations about equality / | 305.488 FOR Somebody's daughter : a memoir / | 305.523 BAN -L Going infinite : the rise and fall of a new tycoon / | 305.8 GIL Almost brown : a mixed-race family memoir / |
Includes bibliographical references.
A passionate advocate for gender equity, and one of our most respected journalists, explores the most pressing issues facing women in Canada today with humour and heart. The fight for women's rights was supposed to have been settled. Or, to put it another way, women were supposed to have settled--for what we were grudgingly given, for the crumbs from the table that we had set. For thirty per cent of the seats in Canada's Parliament; for five per cent of the CEO's offices; for a tenth of the salary of male athletes; for the tiny per cent of sexual assault cases that result in convictions; for tenuous control over our health and bodies. "Aren't we over it yet? No, we're not," Elizabeth Renzetti writes. In this book, Renzetti draws upon her own life story and her years as an award-winning journalist at the Globe and Mail, where her columns followed the trajectory of women's rights. Forcefully argued, accessible, and witty, What She Said explores a range of issues: the increasingly hostile world of threats that deter young women from seeking a role in public life; the use of non-disclosure agreements to silence victims of sexual harassment and assault; the inadequacy of access to health care and reproductive justice, especially as experienced by Indigenous and racialized women; the ways in which future technologies must be made more inclusive; the disparity in pay, wealth, and savings, and how women are not yet socialized to be the best financial managers they can be; the imbalanced burden of care, from emotional labour to child care. Renzetti explores the nuance of these issues, so often presented as divisive, with humour and sympathy, in order to unite women at a time when women must work together to protect their fundamental right to exist fully and freely in the world. What She Said is a rallying cry for a more just future.