What We Owe Our Daughters
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Sprache:Englisch
Fr. 8.00
inkl. gesetzl. MwSt.Beschreibung
Produktdetails
Format
ePUB
Kopierschutz
Ja
Family Sharing
Ja
Text-to-Speech
Ja
Erscheinungsdatum
02.06.2026
Verlag
J.J. RamosSeitenzahl
(Printausgabe)
Dateigröße
833 KB
Sprache
Englisch
EAN
9798235610958
There is a kind of book about feminism that argues, and there is a kind that remembers. What We Owe Our Daughters is the second kind.
J.J. Ramos's earlier books named the patterns of the algorithmic patriarchy and asked what feminism's next wave will require. This is the reflective companion. It is a book for the women who have started asking a question their structural arguments cannot answer: what do we actually say to our daughters, our nieces, the girls who are fifteen this year and inheriting a world we did not quite expect.
Across thirteen essays, Ramos traces the inheritance line the great-grandmother who could not vote, the grandmother who never said why, the mother who almost said, the daughter who will soon be old enough to ask. She draws on the feminist tradition that wrote letters to daughters (Adrienne Rich, Audre Lorde, Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie) and on the lived material of women in midlife now: the silences finally breaking, the algorithm in the fourteen-year-old's room, the brunch conversations that have outpaced our vocabulary in some places and not yet started in others.
The book is not a manifesto. It does not argue; it observes. It asks what we received from the women before us, with gratitude and with honest accounting of what was incomplete. It asks what our daughters are receiving in real time, from the recommendation feed as much as from us. It asks what we are choosing to hand forward, deliberately, instead of letting it pass on unspoken.
The final chapters include three letters to a daughter at three ages five, fifteen, twenty-five and a closing reckoning with what every mother is quietly composing in her head and never sending.
For readers of Of Woman Born, We Should All Be Feminists, Dear Ijeawele, Men Explain Things to Me, Bad Feminist, and The Argonauts and for anyone keeping a letter open in her drawer.
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