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Intellectual. Feminist. Polemicist. Provocateur. This riveting
biography of Germaine Greer traces the personal and political
history of one of the most important, radical, and controversial
women of twentieth and twenty-first century feminism. It reveals
how her public persona has shifted with time from sixties
trailblazer to present-day rabble-rouser, and why she endures as a
subject of fascination. This is the first biography of Greer for
two decades, drawing on unprecedented access to her extensive
personal archive, opened at Melbourne University in 2016. Kleinhenz
has interrogated Greer's personal and professional files, spoken to
people who have known her from her school days onwards, and read
every word written by and about her. Beginning with Greer's
troubled early life in 1940s Melbourne, it traces her career,
relationships with men and women, her travels, and her home life,
and examines Greer's work and ideas from The Female Eunuch to the
#MeToo movement. The result is a rich, detailed portrait of a woman
rightly both legendary and notorious - revealed here in all her
glories, weaknesses, and contradictions.
Kathleen Fitzpatrick, born in 1905, was the grand-daughter of
Melbourne real estate agent JR Buxton, whose investments in land
and housing brought him wealth and significantly influenced much of
his city's early development. In her memoir, Solid Bluestone
Foundations, described by her great friend Manning Clark as 'a
magnificent book of memories', Kathleen painted an evocative
picture of family life at her grandparents' mansion Hughenden in
Middle Park, and of middle-class living in early twentieth-century
Melbourne. In adulthood she went on to become a brilliant academic
and teacher whose former pupils became some of Australia's finest
historians and intellectuals. But she was also a lonely woman with
a low view of her own worth as a writer and scholar. Through
meticulous research, Elizabeth Kleinhenz uncovers what lay behind
the mask that Kathleen Fitzpatrick presented to the world. Capable
of deep love, she was almost vainly self-conscious. She was witty
but cutting, proud but ashamed, could be arrogant and overbearing,
but also modest to the point of subservience. An accomplished
thinker, she allowed the major insights of second-wave feminism to
pass her by. After her marriage failed she never again had an open
relationship. A Brimming Cup tells the story of Kathleen's
outstanding academic career, her contributions to social and
political debates of the day, her relationships, and her successes
and disappointments as a historian, writer and woman of her time.
Two leading educational experts examine the theory and practice
behind schools with strong learning and performance cultures. They
explore why and how schools become moving schools, with teachers
who have high levels of professional accountability, taking
personal and collective responsibility for improving students
learning and their own teaching methods. Moreover, they explain why
and how school leaders should understand and respect the complexity
of teachers professional knowledge base and value their work
accordingly.
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Paperback
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R205
R168
Discovery Miles 1 680
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