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In Praise of Messy Lives: Essays

  • Book
  • 2012
  • #Feminism #Essay
Katie Roiphe
@KARoiphe
(Author)
www.goodreads.com
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3.37/5 999 ratings
1 Recommender
1 Mention
1 Collection
This powerful collection of essays ranges from pop culture to politics, from Hillary Clinton to Susan Sontag, from Facebook to Mad Men, from Joan Didion to David Foster Wallace to—m... Show More

This powerful collection of essays ranges from pop culture to politics, from Hillary Clinton to Susan Sontag, from Facebook to Mad Men, from Joan Didion to David Foster Wallace to—most strikingly—the author’s own life. For fans of the essays of John Jeremiah Sullivan and Jonathan Lethem.
Named one of the best books of the year by The New York Times • The Wall Street Journal Katie Roiphe’s writing — whether in the form of personal essays, literary criticism, or cultural reporting — is bracing, wickedly entertaining, and deeply engaged with our mores and manners. In these pages, she turns her exacting gaze on the surprisingly narrow-minded conventions governing the way we live now. Is there a preoccupation with “healthiness” above all else? If so, does it lead insidiously to judging anyone who tries to live differently? Examining such subjects as the current fascination with Mad Men, the oppressiveness of Facebook (“the novel we are all writing”), and the quiet malice our society displays toward single mothers, Roiphe makes her case throughout these electric pages. She profiles a New York prep school grad turned dominatrix; isolates the exact, endlessly repeated ingredients of a magazine “celebrity profile”; and draws unexpected, timeless lessons from news-cycle hits such as Arnold Schwarzenegger’s “love child” revelations. On ample display in this book are Roiphe’s insightful, occasionally obsessive takes on an array of literary figures, including Jane Austen, John Updike, Susan Sontag, Joan Didion, and Margaret Wise Brown, the troubled author of Goodnight, Moon. And reprinted for the first time and expanded here is her much-debated New York Times Book Review cover piece, “The Naked and the Conflicted” — an unabashed argument on sex and the contemporary American male writer that is in itself an exciting and refreshing reminder that criticism matters. As steely-eyed in examining her own life as she is in skewering our cultural pitfalls, Roiphe gives us autobiographical pieces — on divorce, motherhood, an emotionally fraught trip to Vietnam, the breakup of a female friendship — that are by turns deeply moving, self-critical, razor-sharp, and unapologetic in their defense of “the messy life.”
In Praise of Messy Lives is powerfully unified, vital work from one of our most astute and provocative voices.

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Number of Pages: 288

ISBN: 0812992822

ISBN-13: 9780812992823

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Phil Treagus-Evans @philtreagus · Jun 23, 2019
  • Curated in THE MOST IMPORTANT BOOKS ON FEMINISM
Katie Roiphe is a sort-of controversial figure in the feminist landscape. Many of us adore her, but some feminists criticise her for not being ‘feminist enough’. Among Roiphe’s ‘sins’, according to the latter thinking, are her penchant for masculine men, her refusal to marry art with ideology and that she doesn’t automatically take women’s side in every gender-related dispute, but searches for nuances. She sins in these ways, and in many others, also in this excellent collection of essays. But her slaughtering of sacred cows is always thoughtful, witty and erudite, never sadistic. Unlike certain ideologues disguised as writers writing about ‘issues’, Roiphe is never preachy. And she is willing to consider the views of her opponents and reconsider her own views. It is this tendency to hesitate before pronouncing an opinion, as well as the practicality and playfulness of her feminism that I especially adore. Everybody should read Roiphe!
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