Unity Books x West Auckland Book Club
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Unity Books x West Auckland Book Club

  • Ages 18+

Join Chloe from Unity Books at Crafty Baker in Titirangi for a conversation on Girl on Girl

By Unity Books Auckland

Date and time

Saturday, July 26 · 5:45 - 7pm NZST.

Location

Crafty Baker Titirangi

490 South Titirangi Road #2 Auckland, Auckland 0604 New Zealand

Refund Policy

Refunds up to 7 days before event

About this event

  • Event lasts 1 hour 15 minutes
  • Ages 18+
  • Free venue parking

Join Unity bookseller Chloe in conversation on Pulitzer Prize finalist Sophie Gilbert's new book, Girl on Girl: How Pop Culture turned a Generation of Women Against Themselves. As usual, $5 of the ticket price is redeemable against purchases made on the night and you can enjoy a glass of wine and some nibbles amongst fellow bibliophiles in a beautiful location.

You can buy the book here.

“Searing… rigorously researched but never stuffy… Gilbert has compiled perhaps the first comprehensive examination of turn-of-the-millennium mainstream, cool-kid trends and ephemera, and how they were largely molded by those in power to sell a generation of girls and young women reality-warping lies.” —The New York Times

From Atlantic critic and Pulitzer Prize finalist Sophie Gilbert, a blazing critique of early aughts pop culture

What happened to feminism in the twenty-first century? This question feels increasingly urgent in a moment of cultural and legislative backlash, when widespread uncertainty about the movement’s power, focus, and currency threatens decades of progress.

Sophie Gilbert identifies an inflection point in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when the energy of third-wave and “riot grrrl” feminism collapsed into a regressive period of hyper-objectification, sexualization, and infantilization. Mining the darker side of nostalgia, Gilbert trains her keen analytic eye on the most revealing cultural objects of the era, across music, film, television, fashion, tabloid journalism, and more. What she recounts is harrowing, from the leering gaze of the paparazzi to the gleeful cruelty of early reality TV and a burgeoning internet culture vicious toward women in the spotlight and damaging for those who weren’t. Gilbert tracks many of the period’s dominant themes back to the rise of internet porn, which gained widespread influence as it began to pervade our collective consciousness.

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NZ$10Jul 26 · 5:45 PM GMT+12