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Reviews for The Feminist Reader: Essays in Gender and the Politics of Literary Criticism

 The Feminist Reader magazine reviews

The average rating for The Feminist Reader: Essays in Gender and the Politics of Literary Criticism based on 2 reviews is 3 stars.has a rating of 3 stars

Review # 1 was written on 2019-04-01 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Susan Ashner
I have been tricked by the synopsis I had read. I had thought it was a series of new essays, commentaries to be precise, about the main authors in the history of feminist literary criticism. But apart from the Introduction, it's a simple collection of extracts. Belsey's introduction is very straight-forward, it's a good read. And a couple of essays are articles and speeches that were very hard to find, but the rest has been published and circulated widely, and is easily retrievable in the second-hand book market. In the end, I think 20% of the book was useful for my research.
Review # 2 was written on 2013-03-09 00:00:00
0was given a rating of 3 stars Russell Smith
This has been a must-read since it came out, because it's a book with a theory. Whether you are convinced or unconvinced by the theory of steppe history here, you have to engage with this one. As a matter of fact I'm largely unconvinced, and yet this is a terrific book for me. I thought it best on: the Hsiung-nu or Huns - can't say enough about his account of Hun history; on the Turks and Tang China; and on Chinggis Khan, particulary on his politics which went against tribal conventions - on his innovations. It's brilliant on the culture of geography: on the great cultural divide between the steppe and China. From the introduction on 'The Steppe Nomadic World': Inner Asia was a zone of long-term interaction between two opposing cultures with powerfully fixed ideas of themselves and others. For more than 2000 years the nomadic peoples of the steppe confronted the world's largest agrarian state without being politically incorporated by it or adopting its culture... Throughout East Asia even fiercely independent neighbors adopted Chinese models of state organisation and foreign relations, ideographic literacy, cuisine, clothes and calendars. All of East Asia that is except for China's great opponents on the steppelands in the north. There horse-riding nomads not only rejected Chinese culture and ideology, worse, they obstinately refused to see any value in it except in terms of the material goods the Chinese could offer. How's that for a battlecry? He starts out from this observation, and studies nomad-Chinese interactions - in terms of nomads' exploitation of China for those material goods, while they go on standing aloof from the culture (or trying to). It's fascinating, it's important, and covers the entire history of the steppe. You needn't believe his interpretations in every case. I still five-starred, no question.


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