A year on from the allegations against Harvey Weinstein and the beginnings of #metoo movement Mary Beard revisits the gender agenda with new material on rape, consent and how the discussion has moved on.
Mary Beard is a professor of classics at Newnham College, Cambridge, and the Classics editor of the TLS. She has world-wide academic acclaim, and is a fellow of the British Academy and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. Her previous books include Civilisations: How We look / The Eye of Faith, the international bestseller SPQR, and the bestselling, Wolfson Prize-winning Pompeii, and also The Parthenon and Confronting the Classics. Her blog has been collected in the books It's a Don's Life and All in a Don's Day. All these books are published by Profile.
A modern feminist classic
*Observer*
With clearsightedness and wry humour, this self-described 'gobby
woman' proves public speech is no longer the preserve of maleness.
More power to her.
*FT*
... exposes the roots of today's expectations of how a woman should
behave ... time for a change, she argues - and now!
*Guardian*
This book is a treasure, both as a fascinating read in itself and
as a fine work of reference to correct our lazy misconceptions
about an ancient world that still has much to instruct us today
*Herald*
An urgent feminist cri de coeur, spot-on in its utterly reasonable
plea that a woman 'who dares to open her mouth in public' actually
be given a hearing.
*Kirkus Reviews*
Brilliant
*Guardian*
Enlightening ... explains how misogyny works and why it is so
resilient
*Guardian*
A sparkling and forceful manifesto
*New York Times*
Clear, rich, subversive and witty
*San Francisco Chronicle*
An irresistible call for women to speak up, act and redefine their
power
*People Magazine*
Praise for Mary Beard:
'She's pulled off that rare trick of becoming a don with a high
media profile who hasn't sold out, who is absolutely respected by
the academy for her scholarship ... what she says is always
powerful and interesting
*Guardian*
An irrepressible enthusiast with a refreshing disregard for
convention
*FT*
With such a champion as Beard to debunk and popularise, the future
of the study of classics is assured
*Daily Telegraph*
Dynamically, wittily and authoritatively brings the ancient world
to life
*Simon Sebag Montefiore*
Praise for SPQR:
Fast-moving, exciting, psychologically acute, warmly sceptical -
Bryan Appleyard
*Sunday Times*
Vastly engaging ... a tremendously enjoyable and scholarly read
*Observer*
Sustaining the energy that such a topic demands for more than 600
pages, while providing a coherent answer to the question of why
Rome expanded so spectacularly, is hugely ambitious. Beard succeeds
triumphantly ... full of insights and delights ... SPQR is
consistently enlivened by Beard's eye for detail and her excellent
sense of humour.
*Sunday Times*
Masterful ... This is exemplary popular history, engaging but never
dumbed down, providing both the grand sweep and the intimate
details that bring the distant past vividly to life
*Economist*
Ground-breaking ... invigorating ... revolutionary ... a whole new
approach to ancient history
*Spectator*
Selected as one of the 100 best books of the 21st century: An
instant feminist classic
*The Guardian*
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