10 books every feminist should read

Publish date: 2024-05-29
1

'Dear Ijeawele' by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

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We Should All Be Feminists is arguably Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's most famous writing on feminism, but Dear Ijeawele is just as noteworthy. Created as a letter to a friend who asked for help on how to raise her daughter as a feminist, the book comprises 15 practical pieces of advice. Adichie's forthright, sage and warm voice shines bright throughout as she gets to the heart of what it means to be a woman today.

2

'The Beauty Myth' by Naomi Wolf

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First published in 1990, Wolf's polemic on the connecting tissue between female power and beauty is still as relevant as ever, and remains a seminal text. It discusses the 'myth' that women can only be accepted within society if they are beautiful, and how shifting and increasingly unrealistic these standards of beauty have become over time. Her words are more prescient than ever, particularly when we consider that they were penned before the dawn of social media and the constant barrage of unattainable images of female attractiveness.

3

'Bad Feminist' by Roxane Gay

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Bad Feminist is a collection of wry essays that looks at what it means to be a modern feminist while enjoying things that might seem at odds with it, whether that be following fashion or wanting children. This reassuring, funny and wise book discusses how the culture we consume becomes who we are, and offers ways in which we can all do better.

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4

'Your Silence Will Not Protect You' by Audre Lorde

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Audre Lorde is one of the 20th century's most inspiring and powerful scribes. Your Silence Will Not Protect You is a must-have collection of her essays, prose and poetry, which skewers and dissects the realities of womanhood and, in particular, Black womanhood. Her words are breathtaking and this collection is a pivotal starting point when approaching intersectional feminism.

5

'My Life On The Road' by Gloria Steinem

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Gloria Steinem has always been on the move. Ever since she was young, her father would pack the family into the car, to go off on a new adventure. Although such an early nomadic existence came with its challenges, it did prepare Steinem for a life on the road as she became an instrumental part of the women's rights movement and a tireless campaigner. This engaging and warm memoir is about that journey and how she'll never give up fighting for her causes.

6

'The Second Sex' by Simone de Beauvoir

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A foundational feminist text, de Beauvoir's groundbreaking treatise on the state of womanhood is essential reading. Originally published in 1949, it featured a vastly researched history of the treatment of women and their current status in society. It was banned by the Vatican at the time and went on to become the inspiration for Second Wave Feminism that would dominate the Women's Movement of the 1960s and 1970s.

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7

'Invisible Women' by Caroline Criado Perez

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If ever you need to provide evidential proof that gender inequality still rages to a backward-thinking relative, then show them Caroline Criado Perez's exhaustively researched book immediately. It focuses on the shocking gender bias that affects all women, highlighting the many ways that society has forgotten women and the impact that this has on our health and wellbeing. Invisible Women is data-based number-crunching at its most persuasive, and an important tool for change.

8

'Fat is a Feminist Issue' by Susie Orbach

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It's hard to believe that this book was first published in 1978; its messaging about the politicisation of female bodies and, in particular, 'fat' female bodies, feels incredibly fresh. Back then it was a pioneering work that took aim at the diet industry and how the size of a woman's body is about much more than food, but instead represents power, strength and politics. The most recent edition, published in 2016, includes an updated introduction from Orbach, which looks at how these issues have shifted in our digital age.

9

'Hood Feminism' by Mikki Kendall

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Hood Feminism was published just two years ago, and has already become a significant addition to the feminist canon. This is meaningful precisely because Mikki Kendall's focus is on how the feminist movement has too often left behind Black women, trans women and women from lower socio-economic backgrounds. It is a masterpiece of intersectional feminist writing that looks at how we fight for power and what that means if we forget those who need it most.

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10

'Men Explain Things to Me' by Rebecca Solnit

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Short yet punchy, this book is a must-read. Rebecca Solnit is a master of impactful, witty prose and has penned a compelling narrative here on the realties of mansplaining (she was somewhat responsible for coining the phrase), which goes far beyond the patronising intonations and assumption of men, to the belittling of female experience and capability globally. This is a gift of a text on the rarely discussed subtleties of everyday sexism.

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