Barbara Ehrenreich - Essays

Essays

  • "The Charge: Gynocide", investigative journalism about the Dalkon Shield in the third world, Mother Jones, November/December issue, 1979
  • "Making Sense of La Difference", TIME Magazine, 1992
  • "In Defense of Talk Shows", TIME Magazine, December 4, 1995
  • "The New Creationism: Biology Under Attack" The Nation, June 9, 1997
  • "How 'Natural' Is Rape? Despite a Daffy New Theory, It's Not Just a Guy in Touch with His Inner Caveman", Time Magazine, January 31, 2000
  • "Welcome to Cancerland", 2001 National Magazine Award finalist
  • "A New Counterterrorism Strategy: Feminism", AlterNet, 2005
  • "Fight for Your Right to Party" TIME Magazine, December 18, 2006
  • "My Unwitting Role in Acts of Torture", The Guardian, February 22, 2009
  • "Is It Now a Crime to Be Poor?", New York Times, August 9, 2009
  • "Are Women Getting Sadder? Or Are We All Just Getting a Lot More Gullible?", Guernica Magazine, October 13, 2009
  • "Smile! You've got cancer", The Guardian, January 2, 2010

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Famous quotes containing the word essays:

    I undertake the same project as Montaigne, but with an aim contrary to his own: for he wrote his Essays only for others, and I write my reveries only for myself.
    Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712–1778)

    I have been reporting club meetings for four years and I am tired of hearing reviews of the books I was brought up on. I am tired of amateur performances at occasions announced to be for purposes either of enjoyment or improvement. I am tired of suffering under the pretense of acquiring culture. I am tired of hearing the word “culture” used so wantonly. I am tired of essays that let no guilty author escape quotation.
    Josephine Woodward, U.S. author. As quoted in Everyone Was Brave, ch. 3, by William L. O’Neill (1969)

    If these Essays were worthy of being judged, it might fall out, in my opinion, that they would not find much favour, either with common and vulgar minds, or with uncommon and eminent ones: the former would not find enough in them, the latter would find too much; they might manage to live somewhere in the middle region.
    Michel de Montaigne (1533–1592)