Reviews and Comments

Esther

selfawaresoup@wyrms.de

Joined 2 years, 5 months ago

Queer goth lady in Berlin, buying more books than I find time to read

Some leanings: political philosophy, psychology, queer lit, sci-fi, fantasy, horror

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Reni Eddo-Lodge: Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race (2018, Bloomsbury Publishing)

In 2014, award-winning journalist Reni Eddo-Lodge wrote on her blog about her frustration with the …

Review of "Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race" on 'Goodreads'

Overall this book is excellent. Especially it's focus on intersectionality makes it a strong recommendation for me. Even to someone who doesn't want to read the entire book, the parts about White Privilege (Part 2) and the intersection with feminism (Part 5) are worth a read by themselves.

I found parts of it about history and more recent events hard to contextualise since I've never lived in the UK and probably lack the knowledge of many locations and events that have't made it into international media coverage.

The interview with Nick Griffin is a problematic point of this book since, while deconstructing most of his racist ideas, it glosses over his clearly anti-semitic remarks. Those should have at least been acknowledged as such. By not doing that, his anti-semitism is given an unchallenged platform through this book. An embarrassing oversight, especially since I've read an already revised edition with even …

reviewed Gender Trouble by Judith Butler (Routledge Classics)

Judith Butler: Gender Trouble (2006, Routledge)

Review of 'Gender Trouble' on 'Goodreads'

I wanted to read "Gender Trouble" because it is so widely considered a cornerstone work of contemporary feminist theory. Being released in 1990 makes it hardly contemporary from my present perspective (2018). Seeing it as the almost 30 year old work that it is helped me contextualise it a lot.

This book is often named as one, maybe even THE, foundational text of queer feminist theory. Since my own introduction into feminism happened much later and already in a queer context, the conclusions that Butler comes to are not really new. In that regard, the book did not provide me with a lot of new ideas. It did however serve as a history lesson for the state of feminist theory of the late 1980 and probably well into the 1990s.

Since a lot of the ideas that Butler criticises are still prevalent today, her work offers much needed arguments against …