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Opting In: Having a Child Without Losing Yourself | 
| Author: Amy Richards Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux Category: Book
List Price: $15.00 Buy New: $7.20 You Save: $7.80 (52%)
New (25) Used (12) from $5.83
Avg. Customer Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 312846
Media: Paperback Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 336 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6 Dimensions (in): 8.1 x 5.4 x 1.3
ISBN: 0374226725 Dewey Decimal Number: 306.8743 EAN: 9780374226725 ASIN: 0374226725
Publication Date: April 29, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Product Description
For contemporary women, motherhood has become as polarizing a proposition as it is a powerful calling. For some women this tension is manifest in a debate over whether or not to have children. For others it concerns whether to stay at home with their children or stay in the workforce. Still others feel abandoned altogether by the supposedly pro-family and pro-mother social justice movement that is feminism and are at a loss when it comes to reconciling their maternal instincts with their political beliefs. With Opting In, Amy Richards addresses the anxiety over parenting that women face today in a book that mixes memoir, interviews, historical analysis, and feminist insight. In her refreshingly direct and thoughtful approach, Richards covers everything from the truth about our biological clocks and the trends toward extending fertility, to parenting with nature and nurturing in mind, to our relationship with our own mothers, to what feminism’s relationship to motherhood is and always has been. Speaking from the vantage point of someone who is both a parent and one of our leading feminist activists, Richards cuts through the cacophony of voices intent on telling women the “appropriate” way to be a mother and reveals instead how to confidently forge your own path while staying true to yourself and your ideals.
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| Customer Reviews:
Thoughtful and well-crafted August 27, 2008 Amy Richards's Opting In is a marvelous piece of writing that addresses the sometimes interesting dichotomies of being both mother and feminist, and how those two identities should be one and the same rather than polarizing camps. With an eye toward established theory while at the same time quite willing to see the humor in absolutist thought, Richards has written a book that is both entertaining and thoughtful, with each chapter better than the last.
Eh July 21, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
Richards is a good writer and I enjoyed reading her story and thoughts. But this to me was a good afternoon read from the library, nothing more. The book is a bit rambling and unstructured, and I got really impatient with it at times. She goes on for a long time about why women chose to stay at home or work, and while I agree with many of her thoughts (for example: that staying home can have at least as much to do with dissatisfaction with their own careers or lives as it is for the sake of the kids), I think it's amazing that she never brings the cost of daycare into the discussion.
I preferred "The Mommy Myth" as a history of views on motherhood and the tough choices that women have to make once they have their first child.
Compendium Read July 14, 2008 2 out of 2 found this review helpful
The perfect reader or audience for this book is going to be a new mother in her 20s or 30s and preferably someone who hasn't heard of the Association for Research on Mothering, Adrienne Rich or the plethora of published lay and academic books on mothering and parenting. This is a great book and the new reader to said topics will enjoy the breadth of what it covers and the style. Richards (and her co-author of two other books Manifest and Grassroots) both write in an easy to read style.
This book pretty much rehashes countles other books and studies and includes personal points and nonscientific examples (her friends/colleagues, and strangers). It was a really easy read, but at times, I was again rolling my eyes at the self-congatulatory statements that she made. I don't have my copy here at work, but for instance making the comparison that kids from a single parent household share attributes with people of color was a bit of a stretch. She meant to say that she shared a sense of not belonging to mainstream society as a white woman who was raised by a single parent and that she had an affinity for folks of color or something like that. Nonetheless, this particular section of the book reminded me of limosine liberals trying hard to prove through street cred.
There was nothing new here; however, I will suggest this book to women who are unfamiliar with the more academic area of study or other women who haven't read Breeder, Mothers Who Think, Perfect Madness, The Mommy Myth, Ariel Gore, Ayun Halliday, and too many others to list.
Richards book does give an overview of the literature and I'm sure that a reader will be encouraged to look through the list of sources and bibliography in the back. But, for me, someone who has been officially parenting for 11 years and other parenting prior to this, the book did not present any new material.
Feminist Mothers-To-Be, Rejoice! June 2, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Richards' book shines as a beacon of hope to frazzled, overstressed mothers: having a life outside of motherhood is entirely possible! It's about priorities, balance, and knowing your limits.
Richards balances personal anecdotes with well-known feminist commentary. She cites the changes society has undergone to allow mothers and their parenting partners more flexibility in the workplace and beyond.
A must-read for mothers, mothers-to-be, fathers, partners, EVERYONE!
Personal Indeed Political June 1, 2008 3 out of 4 found this review helpful
Richards book is carefully researched with a plethora of women's voices on motherhood. Richards is the Third Wave feminist version of Doctor Spock. Her writing is a vital contribution to the feminist movement as it underscores the importance of choice in motherhood. Richards draws on personal experiences, and interviews with other mothers, to demonstrate that whom we co-parent with is just as important as how we parent. Richards acknowledges the difficulties of balancing personal and professional, and hi-lites research that demonstrates how our personal decisions impact the political movement of feminism.
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