Available Formats
(Un)kind: How 'Be Kind' Entrenches Sexism
By (Author) Victoria Smith
Little, Brown Book Group
Fleet
11th February 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Gender studies: women and girls
Paperback
336
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 22mm
A brilliantly witty and insightful analysis of how kindness culture is used against women.
Using the #JustBeKind trend of the 2020s as a starting point, (Un)kind explores how traditional beliefs about women's 'kind' nature have been repackaged for an age that remains dependent - socially, politically, economically - on female self-sacrifice while finding the concept outdated and essentialist.Looking at the various guises under which kindness culture is sold to women and girls - from play to self-help, social justice activism to empowerment - it argues that the pressure on women and girls has not decreased, but instead been incorporated into the 'work' of feminism. (Un)kind also proposes that this phenomenon ultimately distorts relations between humans, harming not just those coerced into performing 'kindness work' but the supposed recipients of their services. Kindness culture supports the backlash against feminism while claiming to represent feminism's - and women's - true nature. It is, at heart, unkind.Praise for Hags'The greatest joy of Hags is its lively erudition . . . eloquent, clever and devastating' The Times'A book that could not be more necessary' Observer'Brilliantly witty, engaging and insightful' ScotsmanVictoria Smith is the author of Hags: the demonisation of middle-aged women. Her journalism appears in The Critic, the New Statesman and various other publications.