Perfect Madness: Motherhood in the Age of Anxiety by Judith Warner

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(Paperback - Bargain)

  • Publisher: Riverhead Books
  • Pub. Date: February 2006
  • ISBN-13: 9780641803277
  • 352pp
  • Edition Description: Bargain

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Synopsis

The paradigm-shattering bestseller that investigates how women have fallen into the trap of "total motherhood," and how that mind-set damages them and their relationships with their husbands and children.

AUTHORBIO:
Judith Warner is the author of a range of nonfiction books, among them You Have the Power: How to Take Back Our Country and Restore Democracy in America (with Howard Dean) and the bestselling biography Hillary Clinton: The Inside Story. A former special correspondent for Newsweek in Paris, she reviews books for The Washington Post and has written about politics and women's issues for magazines including New Republic and Elle.

The New York Times - Judith Shulevitz

Manifestoes blast their way into the popular consciousness on two kinds of fuel: recognition (we see ourselves in them) and rage (we can no longer tolerate the injustice they describe). Judith Warner's Perfect Madness: Motherhood in the Age of Anxiety brims with both. She clearly means for her denunciation of American-style mothering to do for overstressed 21st-century upper-middle-class American women what Betty Friedan's Feminine Mystique did for underemployed 20th-century ones.

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Customer Reviews

No solutionsby Anonymous

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February 27, 2007: I enjoyed reading this book because it reinforced how crazy we, as mothers, have gotten. And it's nice to see that we're all pretty much in the same boat, albeit a sinking boat. What I didn't like about the book was that it didn't give any solutions to our problems. The book went on and on about how through history we GOT to where we are (anxiety- & guilt-ridden, frazzled parents) but it doesn't give many suggestions on what we can do about it! I'd like to know how to stop this madness!!?!

A good readby Anonymous

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March 04, 2006: Judith Warner successfully exposed a strong view being held by some groups of professional women about motherhood in the new millennium. It is all about securing career growth while being a mother, a path that demands less presence by the mother in the life of her child(ren), while at the same time is fraught with the pressure to be the ideal mum that children always dream about, the mother who is always there when needed. It is a rising conflict in motherhood in the rapidly professional America where the specter of single parent families is growing everyday. However I think this book should have toned down its strong feminist perspective.


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