Fury: Women Write About Sex, Power and Violence
By (Author) Samantha Trenoweth
Hardie Grant Books
Hardie Grant Books
1st February 2015
Australia
General
Non Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
305.4
Paperback
272
Width 210mm, Height 135mm
290g
In Australia violence against women is a silent epidemic. By the age of 15 almost 20% of women have experienced sexual violence and more than one in three have experienced physical violence. One woman dies every week due to domestic violence in Australia. Violence against women is the leading contributor to death, disability and illness in women aged 15 to 44. Violence against women has been grabbing headlines all year:girls have been mutilated; girlfriends have been shot in bathrooms and thrown from balconies; wives have been burned; andmothers and kids have been left homeless by closing refuges.In this collection, some of Australias best women writers stare straight into the face of the monster and plot its defeat. Violence against women is a serious issue, but Fury is not a dry, academic tome. From personal perspectives to political perspectives to indigenous perspectives, this is a book of engaging, impassioned and intelligent narratives, perfect for a general readership.
Anne Summers writes about the early days of the women's refuge movement.Van Badham puts the ball back in men's court and asks what they can do.Mandy Sayer gives a moving account of her childhood, spent fleeing from a violent stepfather.Natasha Stott Despoja writes about family violence from a political perspective.Meena Kandasamy discusses violence against women in India.Clem Bastow urges us to stop tweeting and do something about misogyny. Other contributors include Susan Chenery, Louise Taylor, Margo Kingston, Fahma Mohamed, Max Sharam, Wendy Bacon, Susan Ardill and Helen Razer.
For the past thirty years, Samantha Trenoweth has worked as a journalist, author and editor in book and magazine publishing, online and also in radio. She has written or co-written five books and edited more than a dozen magazines. She has written for the Sydney Morning Herald, The Australian, HQ and Rolling Stone, among others, and has worked at the ABC. Her books includeJenny Kee: A Big Life, The Future of God(interviews with prominent religious thinkers),1001 Australians(with Toby Creswell) and Bewitched & Bedevilled: Women Write the Gillard Years (ed.).