Recommended: Night Waves, Feminism

Posted by Vicki Owen on Monday, February 8th, 2010 at 6:25 pm.

Anne McElvoy, author of ‘New Feminism’, discusses whether feminism is central to civilised 21st century society.

Night Waves: Feminism

To listen to it, click here.

Anne McElvoy, author of ‘New Feminism’, a book which argues that women should focus on the political and not the personal, discusses whether feminism is central to civilised 21st century society.

Her guests are: Natasha Walter, Joan Smith, Kat Banyard and Antonia Senior, the lawyer Maleiha Malik and the sociologist Catherine Hakim.

Ten years on from writing ‘New Feminism’, Anne McElvoy thinks she got it wrong. Her new book ‘Living Dolls’ argues women are being sold an airbrushed, highly sexualised and increasingly narrow vision of ‘femininity’.

‘The ambitions of many young girls are being limited by a culture that asks them to see their only proper occupation as consumerism and self-decoration.

‘But, if three of the key demands of women’s liberation were the pill, abortion rights and less constrained sexual behaviour, has the liberal approach to sex left a bitter legacy today? Did feminism get it wrong about sex?

‘The Equality Bill is currently making its way through parliament spearheaded by Harriet Harman and yet there is still no real consensus amongst women about what equality really means or what the state should do about it.

‘Anne McElvoy talks to Kat Banyard about her book The Equality Illusion, discusses what equality might look like in the 21st century and asks what role, if any, state should play.

‘And, is one of the biggest challenges facing european feminism in 2010 multi-culturalism? From feminist support for the Minaret ban in Switzerland, to controveries about the proposed banning of the burkha in France and unease about the increase in Muslim women veiling themselves in Britain, the clash between feminist ideas and the tolerance of very different ways of life has been played out on the streets and in the news. Can the quest for women’s rights be combined with a tolerance of different religious and social mores practiced by other cultures? Or does something have to give?’

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