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MANIFESTA: Young Women, Feminism, and the Future.


MANIFESTA: Young Women, Feminism, and the Future by Jennifer Baumgardner Jennifer Baumgardner (b. circa 1970) is an author and Third-wave feminist activist. She resides in Brooklyn with her son Skuli. Baumgardner who identifies herself as bisexual had a long term relationship with Amy Ray of the Indigo Girls.  and Amy Richards Farrar, Straus and Giroux, $15.00

IMAGINE A DAY WITHOUT FEMINISM. That's what Jennifer Baumgardner and Amy Richards ask readers to do in the opening of their book ManifestA. They sketch out a chilling portrait of brides at the altar promising to obey their husbands, girls taking home economics, and women uninformed about the side effects Side effects

Effects of a proposed project on other parts of the firm.
 of birth control pills birth control pill
n.
See oral contraceptive.


birth control pill Oral contraceptive, see there
.

Of course, I rarely ever think about feminism. Why should I? I'm perfectly free to indulge in my taste for makeup and fun clothes while pursuing a career. Does this mean I take the feminist movement for granted? Probably, and that's just what Baumgardner and Richards, one a former, and the other a current, editor at Ms. magazine Ms. is an American feminist magazine founded by American feminist and activist Gloria Steinem, which first appeared in 1971 as an insert in New York magazine. , are concerned about.

To help ensure that Generation X doesn't forget what the women's movement women's movement: see feminism; woman suffrage.
women's movement

Diverse social movement, largely based in the U.S., seeking equal rights and opportunities for women in their economic activities, personal lives, and politics.
 has accomplished, they've written ManifestA, a book designed to help women today consciously embrace feminism. They want to allow a generation that has grown up with Nike jingles like "I am strong. I am invincible. I am woman," to understand what it took to get to this point. By constructing a historical foundation and weaving popular culture into it, Manifest A serves as a guide for young women rather than a rant about what's holding back females. In Manifest A, Baumgardner and Richards lay out why women today need to understand history to realize that they are feminists, whether they know it or not.

They write: "After 30 years of feminism, the world we inhabit barely resembles the world we were born into. And there's still a lot left to do."

The authors trace feminism's evolution starting with the suffragette movement and women getting the right to vote--the First Wave of feminism. The Second Wave came when abortion rights, equal pay, and sexism became the focus of feminist reform in the late 1960s. The authors end up with the current Third Wave involving managing the choices women now face thanks to their mothers' and grandmothers' hard work.

They've included a timeline of important moments for feminism, and a lexicon for those who are unfamiliar with words like "out," meaning that a homosexual openly dates members of the same sex--making the book seem a little like Feminism for Dummies. But Baumgardner and Richards also cover a broad swath of cultural ground, from the effects of Judy Blume novels on girls to why Katie Rophie's work is antagonistic to feminism. It's a useful digestion, framed by the larger point that vigilance is still necessary if women are to sustain and build on the gains of the past.

Unlike other Third Wave stalwarts like Naomi Wolf and Susan Faludi, Baumgardner and Richards have aimed their book at young women, even girls in high school, using a friendly, older sister approach to their tutorial rather than a serious intellectual investigation of policy and politics. But for a book designed as an accessible primer on feminism for the masses, it seems disproportionately focused on an elite bunch of women, which, of course, is the longtime criticism of mainstream feminism.

Baumgardner and Richards start with a chapter dedicated to a dinner party with some of their feminist buddies, including Elizabeth Wurtzel, author of Bitch and Prozac Nation, Amaryllis amaryllis (ăm'ərĭl`ĭs), common name for some members of the Amaryllidaceae, a family of mostly perennial plants with narrow, flat leaves and with lilylike flowers borne on separate, leafless stalks.  Leon, a former Ms. coworker co·work·er or co-work·er  
n.
One who works with another; a fellow worker.
, and Farai Chideya, a correspondent for "Good Morning America Good Morning America is a weekday morning news show that is broadcast on the ABC television network. The show was adapted from The Morning Exchange, a morning show created by and airing on the ABC affiliate in Cleveland, Ohio, and was launched nationally as ." The only time the writers talk about women who live outside of major cities, specifically New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
, is when they discuss Sarah Reid, who lives in a commune in Amherst, Massachusetts where she was trying to put together a coming-of-age ritual for menstruating men·stru·ate  
intr.v. men·stru·at·ed, men·stru·at·ing, men·stru·ates
To undergo menstruation.



[Late Latin m
 gifts--not exactly a model the Everywoman can identify with.

I wondered how the 20-year-old woman in the middle of Kansas who spends weekends cruising Main Street perceives feminism. After all, she, not the big-city college sophomore, is probably the one who thinks "feminist" means "lesbian." The book's last chapter, "A Day With Feminism," is also a ridiculous description of a utopia where "The media are accountable to their constituency," "Women walking through a park at night can feel just as safe as they do during the day," and "Environmentally sound menstrual products are government subsidized." Whatever.

Still, Manifest A serves as a useful reminder of how far we've come "How Far We've Come" is the lead single from Matchbox Twenty's retrospective collection, Exile on Mainstream, which was released on October 2, 2007. The music video premiered on VH1's Top 20 Countdown on September 1, 2007.  and the challenges that remain.
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Title Annotation:Review
Author:Simon, Patricia
Publication:Washington Monthly
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Dec 1, 2000
Words:719
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