Welcome to our book review site go-pdf.online!

You may have to Search all our reviewed books and magazines, click the sign up button below to create a free account.

Sign up

Help! I'm Living with a (Man) Boy
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 280

Help! I'm Living with a (Man) Boy

Are you tired of finding towels on the bathroom floor? How do you go about making men understand the difference between helping out with the housework and doing it? And what about violence? This book features forty-one practical scenarios that many women will identify with immediately. It provides suggestions for dealing with these situations.

Beyond Psychoppression
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 212

Beyond Psychoppression

Betty McLellan surveys the development of psychotherapy and discusses the theory of feminist therapy. She uncovers the oppressiveness of Freudian psychoanalysis, humanistic therapies, lesbian sex therapy, new age and popular psychologies. McLellan explodes myths about women's mental and emotional 'illness'. The book concludes with a feminist therapy that calls for total commitment to action in the world to meet women's needs, both individual and collective.

Unspeakable
  • Language: en

Unspeakable

This is a book about speech and the silencing of speech; about who gets to speak and who does not; about who is listened to and who is ignored. In this down-to-earth analysis of the democratic principle of freedom of speech, Betty McLellan insists that, if this prized democratic principle is to have any continuing credibility, free speech must be free for all.

Ann Hannah, My (un)Remarkable Grandmother
  • Language: en

Ann Hannah, My (un)Remarkable Grandmother

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2017
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

Ann Hannah was an ordinary, no-nonsense, practical woman. While a constant and caring presence in the life of her granddaughter Betty McLellan, she remained emotionally distant. In an effort to understand her grandmother, Betty has used Ann Hannahs everyday expressions as a starting point to uncover the truth about her life. These words and phrases, heard countless times during Bettys childhood, are the clues to a life that, like those of many working-class women in the early 1900s, was fraught with challenges and difficulties and ignored by historians. What did Ann Hannah mean when she said that she was forced to migrate to Australia from England in the 1920s? Why did she remember her husba...

Ann Hannah, My (Un)Remarkable Grandmother
  • Language: en

Ann Hannah, My (Un)Remarkable Grandmother

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2017
  • -
  • Publisher: Unknown

None

Enough
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 282

Enough

In this compelling personal account, Patricia Hughes describes the realities of life as a victim of domestic violence. Analysing her own personal experience, she takes a look into her own past and answers the question, 'How can anyone put up with that?' More importantly, she looks to the future and aims to help other women escape too.

Australian National Bibliography: 1992
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1976

Australian National Bibliography: 1992

None

The Wounded Breast
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 548

The Wounded Breast

This is a rare multicultural perspective on disease, particularly cancer, in which the author takes on a journey through the medical establishments, cultural taboos, gender-tagged attitudes and personal stories of different civilisations. It could also be defined as a quest on how human logic relates to illness. The writing itself blends the diary, personal letters, poems and songs with excerpts from some of the foremost authorities in cancer research, producing an effect upon the reader akin to that which she experienced herself, as she moved back and forth between the emotional and physical shock of the cancer experience and the objective scientific data she uncovered. She begins to find c...

Bibliodiversity
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 99

Bibliodiversity

In a globalized world, megacorp publishing is all about numbers, sameness and following the formula of the latest megasuccess. Each book is expected to pay for itself and all the externalities of publishing. It means books that take off slowly but have long lives, books that change social norms, are less likely to be published. Encapsulated in the term bibliodiversity, coined by Chilean publishers in the 1990s, independent publishers are envisioning a different way. Susan Hawthorne provides a scathing critique of the global publishing industry, set against a visionary proposal for “organic” publishing. She looks at free speech and fair speech, at the environmental costs of mainstream publishing and at the promises and the challenges of the move to digital.

Tackling Child Sexual Abuse
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 448

Tackling Child Sexual Abuse

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2016-06-08
  • -
  • Publisher: Policy Press

This bracing book makes a forceful case for reinvigorating our efforts to address and prevent childhood sexual abuse. In recent years, Sarah Nelson argues, the fight against childhood sexual abuse has been complacent, or even fearful. She attacks the causes of this head-on, reassessing backlashes like that surrounding the “satanic panic” and arguing that policy makers, practitioners, and academics have a duty to move beyond such problems and address the real issue. To that end, she proposes new models for child-centered, perpetrator-focused protection, community prevention, and working with survivor-offenders. Sure to be controversial,Preventing Child Sexual Abuse will challenge—and galvanize—the field.