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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
66 of 72 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Mistakenly attacks attachment parenting,
By Vesna Kovach "duonexus" (Madison, Wis. USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Mommy Myth: The Idealization of Motherhood and How It Has Undermined All Women (Hardcover)
Sisterhood should be powerful -- but after a brief heyday a constellation of religious, political, and commercial forces managed to split apart the bonds formed during the women's movement.
A central theme of The Mommy Myth is the ways women have been set against each other -- black vs. white, rich vs. poor, careerist vs. stay-at-home, parent vs. nonparent, -- in a series of sensationalized media catfights, thus destroying and/or subverting most of the gains of feminism. A fascinating overview of media distortion and cultural brainwashing on such topics as "welfare mothers" (the proportions of welfare recipients who are black, who are single black women with more than two children, or who are teen mothers, are far, far from what the public has been led to believe) and news coverage of nonevents like Satanic day care sex rings and "crack babies" (turns out there's no such thing). The chapter on marketing to children ("targets," according to the industry) is chlling. Book is marred by overuse of cutesy, hip language: way too many "whatever"s "No, no, no"s and similes drawn from famous names in pop culture. But that alone didn't lose it the fifth star. The worst flaw, in my opinion, is Douglas' and Michaels' serious misreading of attachment parenting. Reading over some of the reviews here, it seems that lost them a lot of symphathetic readers, too. Attachment parenting simply is not part of the artificially intensified mothering phenonmenon that the authors are exposing here. It's not a "fad" and it doesn't make mothers feel inadequate. In fact, one reason that I like it -- and the reason why I believe it when proponent Sears claims it's natural -- is because it's so much easier. Baby cries? Pick him or her up. Baby doesn't like to sleep alone? No big mystery -- who does? Why stick 'em in the crib and then create sleep problems that then must be solved? I agree with the attachment parent who was disturbed by their recommendation that a couple should leave their 8-month-old with a grandparent for an entire week. That equates with recommending that the 8-month-old should already be weaned. Book contains several more obvious anti-breastfeeding statements as well. But then, this book is not, as many reader reviews here point out, a parenting book. It's a historical and political book. Its strength is in the startling picture it paints of a culture that is apparently determined to keep gender stereotypes enforced and keep each sex in its place. Media myths of good parenting are totally dismantled. I was left curious as to what their idea of good parenting might actually be.
84 of 93 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
hilariously funny, if only it weren't so sad,
By
This review is from: The Mommy Myth: The Idealization of Motherhood and How It Has Undermined All Women (Hardcover)
This is a terrific book! I thought I'd just skim through it like so many of these kinds of books, but I find myself not wanting to miss a word. Every few pages I grab my husband and read a few lines aloud to him. I can SO relate to so much of what these ladies wrote, even though I definitely don't always agree with them... and isn't that the point? There are as many ways to be a fulfilled woman as there are human beings with two X chromosomes. I love the way most of this book is written and I think it's hilariously funny except that it's not, iykwim. It's a very pithy history of feminism and 'good mother'hood -- what they are, what they're not, what they could be, and what various folks would like you to think they should be -- from the perspective of 'real' women (ie not 'experts') with real opinions which they are unafraid of expressing. For the most part, I highly recommend this book. As women of all ages, we should know about and understand the context in which we are living our lives. *** (Caveat: Parts of the last chapter can be skipped entirely. I think that's where the authors themselves got a wee bit sidetracked and possibly even a mite self-righteous. It is apparently inconceivable to them that some women might make choices different from theirs for reasons that don't fit so well into the binary paradigm the authors have attempted to describe. Rather than taking sides in the "Mommy Wars" perhaps they might have returned to their original proposition that many women are ambivalent about their life choices; in truth, there are trade offs no matter what you do, and life choices span a range of A to Z, not merely A or B. It's a shame, because I really LOVED the rest of this book. It's still very much worth reading, and offers PLENTY of food for thought.) ***
52 of 58 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A book whose time has come,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Mommy Myth: The Idealization of Motherhood and How It Has Undermined All Women (Hardcover)
A straight-talking critique of the Cult of the Perfect Mom, told with a healthy dollop of exasperation. The authors deconstruct this image -- peddled relentlessly by our media -- and assert that it's OK if you don't love parenting every minute. This is *not* an argument against having kids or loving them! The authors are simply trying to let the millions of guilt-ridden moms in this country off the hook, because being a parent isn't easy and it's so much harder when the media suggests otherwise. How this message can be perceived as "anti-child," as a number of reviewers here seem to suggest, is beyond me. So many mothers blame themselves if they aren't euphoric over every dirty diaper and spilled sippy cup. We believe the problem is within *us* and that if we only tried harder, we'd fit those media images. Why aren't we looking at the ways society fails to support mothers -- and fathers? Corporate America and the government get off scott-free, when in reality these institutions could be doing so much more to truly support families. "The Mommy Myth" shines a light on these unasked questions, and encourages mothers to stop blaming themselves and demand more from the institutions that benefit from our efforts to raise responsible, productive future workers and citizens.
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