Monday, January 17, 2011

How To Produce Electricity From A Toy Car Motor

Living Dolls. Why do women today want to be beautiful rather than smart.




Living Dolls. Why do women today want to be beautiful rather than smart.
book launch with author Natasha Walter

02/17/2011, 20h, women's space of the riding school of Bern



She Came to Stay is very pleased and invites you to the book launch with author Natasha Walter in the women's room of the riding school of Bern!

In English translation when necessary. Following bar service and room for discussion - open to all genders

When a 18-year-old wants, instead of a world tour breast augmentation seems to be something went wrong with the emancipation. The British journalist Natasha Walter has young women ... asked about their self-image. The answers are terrifying. Although most women believe they have their lives and their sexuality self-determination under control, but in reality they reduce themselves more and more on her appearance and see only their attractiveness as a key to personal success. Lolita on this scheme, the girls are decided early in life. It is virtually the only pink toys for little girls, sweet "princesses" miniskirts, high heels and lipstick, and intelligent young women from all walks of life can be in talent shows publicly humiliate.

Natasha Walter was born in 1967 in London. After studying at Cambridge and Harvard, she works as a journalist for Vogue, The Observer, The Independent, The Guardian and for the BBC. With this book, she revised the thesis of her first book 'The New Feminism' (1998), in which she announced that sexism
for the women's movement is no longer an issue. Today it is one of the most respected and best-known feminists in Britain.

"What irritated today, sexism and it probably makes it unrecognizable as such, is the alacrity with which many women take part in it. Precisely this freedom of choice Natasha Walter questioned. "Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung


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