Ratings26
Average rating4
A comprehensive history of feminism told through the lens of single women. Might have rated higher had I read it more closely to the time of publication, but it did not really resonate in the current political climate.
I was really excited to read this book on why women aren't getting married any more. But I wasn't wowed. I found Traister's treatment of the subject to be very superficial – focusing on what she and her friends were experiencing, with pretty limited deeper analysis. When she did turn to statistics, she employed a lot of motivated reasoning including interpretation of statistics that I didn't believe were significantly different. It was clear sometimes that she had a pet theory that she couldn't let go of, for instance, when she talked about how urbanization made single life easier, brushing off that the woman in her exemplary anecdote had to move out of NYC to Virginia to survive as a single mother. Also, her work really focused on singleness among highly educated, affluent white women. She had a chapter on African American women, but the breezy anecdotal tone of the book really didn't translate well to this. Even more than other chapters it felt like she interviewed one black woman (Nancy Giles) and generalized from there in favor of her hypothesis. Traister herself is married and waited until she was married to have children, and she really resists acknowledging that the postponement of both marriage and children among highly educated, affluent women is a different beast socially, psychologically and from a woman's liberation perspective than the childbirth before (and instead) of marriage among less privileged women. She references [b:Promises I Can Keep: Why Poor Women Put Motherhood Before Marriage 73305 Promises I Can Keep Why Poor Women Put Motherhood Before Marriage Kathryn Edin https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1438872307l/73305.SY75.jpg 1500229] a few times, but keeps returning to “my life is great! I have a career and female friends and a husband and kids. Isn't single life amazing for women?!
It's a feminist history with real anecdotes from women of all different backgrounds and circumstances, including the author's own story. I loved every bit of it because it is true and it is necessary.
It's the textbook that I wish I had growing up as a young girl who knew that she didn't want to get married and didn't want to have children. I grew up in a Hispanic family that took my premonitions and profession of a single life the same way the Hispanic family in One Day at a Time takes the news of a niece who proudly pronounces her lesbian sexuality: with a care-free hands thrown up above the shoulders gesture, and a “what can you do? It is what it is but I'm not completely acknowledging it” attitude.
All the Single Ladies provides a history that I only knew glimpses of, mentions a movement that I knew from one feminist history course in college but desperately want to know more of. It provided the context of this nation's history of the single woman and the life-changing powerful impact single ladies have on this country's social, political, and economic old-fashioned structures.
I loved the first few chapters of the book, which discussed the history of independent women, and I found myself nodding along in agreement.
However, the middle of the book failed to capture my attention. The author interviewed many women who initially claimed to embrace singlehood, but then ended up getting married later in life. So, okay, I have no issues with women who want to get married, but I was expecting more stories from either single women or women in unmarried partnerships. I was disappointed in reading so many anecdotes of marriage when I really wanted to read accounts of women who didn't get married.
This book is about the current trend of women marrying later in life or not at all and the conditions that have contributed to this new situation. It is also about the history of when in life women got married, and what was said and thought about women who didn't get married. I had the unusual sensation of feeling external validation for my single status while reading this book (I've worked long and hard on the internal validation), so I think it's worth saying that if you're a single lady, this book will make you feel kind of proud of yourself and also relieved that you're not living in another time.
The book has fascinating interviews with many unmarried women, some famous (Anita Hill, Gloria Steinem), most not. It has notes in the back, and an appendix of recommendations from the author for policies that would help make life more equitable for single women in the US.
The author, Rebecca Traister, has had commentary pieces in the news lately, as so many sexual harassment and assault allegations have come out. Her writing has a definite point of view which resonates with me, but is also beautifully plain. I'm looking forward to reading more of her.
3.5 stars, rounding up. As you can see from how long it took me to read this, I had trouble getting into this one for some reason - maybe it's because there wasn't much of a narrative? (I know it's nonfiction, but nonfiction can totally have a narrative.) It's basically chapters all focusing on certain aspects of being a single woman in the USA, with some historical background and contemporary stories. I liked the intersectional approach, and I never felt like the book was exclusively about well-off white women in urban areas. A little more politics/policy throughout would have been nice, but I did enjoy this book and its perspective on an important and underserved group, especially in this crazy-ass election year.
(Bookriot Read Harder 2016 Challenge: #21 Read a book about politics, in your country or another, fiction or nonfiction)
fascinating, what I wanted Spinster to be. there is an excellent quote about how black women were often doing all the things that white women would agitate for (ex working outside the home) but when white middle-class women do it - it counts as feminism. :-O I found the text very thoughtful and balanced.