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The Right Women: A Journey Through the Heart of Conservative America
 
 

The Right Women: A Journey Through the Heart of Conservative America (Paperback)

by Elinor Burkett (Author) "No one had ever before tried throwing a public party for young conservative women, so April Lassiter and her friends were caught between giddy excitement,..." (more)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
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Sharpen your pencils, please, and check off all that apply: conservative American women (a) favor school prayer; (b) are anti-abortion; (c) teach their children the pledge of allegiance; (d) work only in the home; (e) spurn the political and cultural advances made by feminists. If you checked any of these, The Right Women should blow your assurance out of the water.

After crisscrossing America to research this often surprising, intriguing book, avowed feminist Elinor Burkett found it impossible to pigeonhole conservative women. In Washington, young Republican "cigar and martini bimbos" help gut welfare and affirmative action; in Montana, a militia supporter home schools her kids; around the country, "Kitchen Militia" anarchists use fax and phone to expose government corruption and women entrepreneurs plot ways to deep-six onerous regulations. The only thing uniting these women is a determination to radically curb or dismantle present-day American government. Ironically, many of these conservatives wield power because of the feminist movement they disdain, but use it to crush liberal stepping stones that favor government support for women's rights. Although Burkett skims over complexities--suggesting, for example, that women have pretty much achieved parity with men--her book paves the way for true dialogue. --Francesca Coltrera --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Library Journal

A Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter, praised for her AIDS study, The Gravest Show on Earth (LJ 9/1/95), Burkett examines the antifeminist movement among conservative women from college campuses to Capitol Hill.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Inside This Book (Learn More)
First Sentence
No one had ever before tried throwing a public party for young conservative women, so April Lassiter and her friends were caught between giddy excitement, stage fright and a touch of naughtiness as they stood at the top of the steps to the Eighteenth Street Lounge on February 29, 1996. Read the first page
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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Very Though Provoking, Sep 26 2003
By Margaret Knoebel "pivorino" (Portland, OR United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
As a die hard liberal, I was so glad to be able to read a non-threatining view of what many conservatives(women)think. I just don't think I could get through a book by Dr. Laura or Ann Coulter. Despite the fact the author is obviously from a liberal backround, I felt the book was very balanced and objective.

The chapter on abortion was especially enlightening. While I'm still pro-choice, the author brought up sides about this issue that had never occured to me.

I hope some of the women whom she interviewed read her book. Many of those she interviewed scorn the women's rights movement. One of the author's important realizations is that many of these women fail to remember just how opressed women were in the first part of the 20th century. While the women's rights movement has gotten a reputation of no longer representing all women, the ground they gained for all of us during the 60's and 70's should never be forgotton.

Additionally, her writing style is so captivating, I could not put the book down.

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4.0 out of 5 stars always RIGHT, May 23 2002
Elinor Burkett makes a good attempt to potray conservative women objectively, and while she doesn't always succeed, she's fairly honest about her own biases. Burkett, a liberal feminist, is fairly accepting of the political differences between the conservatives and herself, although at times she can be condescending, as if it's some great revelation that they aren't mindless robots brainwashed by the patriarchy. Also, Burkett seems to think many of the women she interviews are hypocritical since they criticize feminism but also have benefitted from it, when most of their criticism is for the modern radical feminism that has alienated them. Still, this book fills a glaring void, since most books in the women's studies section are about the importance of feminism to women rather than about those women who have no use for it. In addition, it's a fun read I'd recommend to liberals and conservatives alike.
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4.0 out of 5 stars Good info, fun read, Nov 27 2001
By cheves (Charlotte NC USA) - See all my reviews
Ms. Burkett has written a very entertaining book that is half political analysis and half human interest. I thought she gave a very objective, journalistic report of what is REALLY going on in the mind of the US women. She didn't always, in my view, reach the right conclusions, for instance I think in her summary she gives a little too much credit to feminism, but overall a real education and enlightenment. She is a skillfull and honest writer. I highly adivise anyone interested in politics to read it!
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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars A fair examination of conservative women
Author Elinor Burkett has a doctorate in History and taught Women's Studies (and other courses) for 13 years before becoming a journalist. Read more
Published on July 8 2000 by pither

4.0 out of 5 stars A must read
As I opened this book, I was prepared to read a few hundred pages worth of insults geared towards conservative, religious, or otherwise "non feminist" women. Read more
Published on April 19 1999

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