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Where and who do we want to be? How might we get there? What might
happen if we stay on our current course? Comedian, writer and
activist Grace Campbell was born into a political environment that
suggested only aggressive, dominant men - like her father Alistair
Campbell - were allowed power. Seeing this, she decided that if she
wanted to be powerful she had to be like him, a decision that
baffled the boys she grew up with. In The Future of Men, Grace
draws on research, interviews and her own experience to examine how
these dynamics and presumptions have shifted in her lifetime, and
will continue to change in coming decades. Men have been writing
about the future of women since words came into existence - now
Grace returns the favour with this sharp, funny and personal essay.
This brief but mighty book is one of five that comprise the first
set of FUTURES essays. Each standalone book presents the author's
original vision of a singular aspect of the future which inspires
in them hope or reticence, optimism or fear. Read individually,
these essays will inform, entertain and challenge. Together, they
form a picture of what might lie ahead, and ask the reader to
imagine how we might make the transition from here to there, from
now to then.
'An outpouring of truth, wit, and beautiful comedic wisdom.'
Katherine Ryan 'Such a funny and interesting book.' Sara Pascoe
'Finally my vagina has a voice!' London Hughes 'Powerful, bold,
vulnerable, beautiful, hilarious, universal, unique.' Scarlett
Curtis ********************************************** For as long
as she can remember, Grace Campbell has been told that she doesn't
suit her name. But being graceful is no fun anyway. Growing up in a
world of privilege and politics, she had a lot to feel confident
about. But she was also a record-breaker when it came to feeling
shame. Shame about sex, shame about rejection, shame about mental
health. But over time, and with a 24 carat gold dose of female
friendship, Grace has turned shame into a defiant sense of self. At
only 27, Grace has got a lot to learn about being an adult, but
she's already got a lot to share about being a disgrace, and how
she came to be utterly, disgustingly, disgracefully proud of it.
This is the book every young woman should read, and every young man
should worry about.
'An outpouring of truth, wit, and beautiful comedic wisdom from the
hilarious and laudably liberated Grace Campbell. I loved it.'
-Katherine Ryan 'Grace has written such a funny and interesting
book, partly because she has a unique perspective of the world, but
mostly because of her own brilliant mind.' -Sara Pascoe 'This book
is hilarious, Grace is a bloody badass, finally my vagina has a
voice!' -London Hughes 'This book is revolutionary. It's powerful,
bold, vulnerable, beautiful, hilarious, universal, unique.'
-Scarlett Curtis 'Furiously funny, gloriously frank...For a book
about shame, Grace is unashamedly herself.' -Amelia Dimoldenberg
For as long as she can remember, Grace Campbell has been told that
she doesn't suit her name. But being graceful is no fun anyway.
Growing up in a world of privilege and politics, she had a lot to
feel confident about. But she was also a record-breaker when it
came to feeling shame. Shame about sex, shame about rejection,
shame about mental health. But over time, and with a 24 carat gold
dose of female friendship, Grace has turned shame into a defiant
sense of self. At only 26, Grace has got a lot to learn about being
an adult, but she's already got a lot to share about being a
disgrace, and how she came to be utterly, disgustingly,
disgracefully proud of it. It's the book every young woman should
read, and every young man should worry about.
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