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You are here: Home / Archives for memoir

memoir

Three Non-Fiction Suggestions

1st August 2010 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Ophelia Speaks: Adolescent Girls Write About Their Search for Self, edited by Sara Shandler, various contributors

Ophelia Speaks is a response to an earlier book, Reviving Ophelia, and contains short essays, poetry, and other pieces of writing by American teenagers. There are two chapters about body issues, ‘Media-Fed Images’ and ‘Eating Disorders’. The pieces are very short but it’s interesting to see a range of snapshots from different lives, and what real teenagers think about their bodies. The rest of the book features pieces of writing about other issues affecting teenagers today, on subjects like abuse, depression, death, friendship, sex, racism, religion, and academic pressure.

The Beauty Myth: How Images of Beauty are Used Against Women, by Naomi Wolf

I’ll confess I haven’t read the whole of this book yet – I read the first chapter, the last, ‘Culture’ and ‘Hunger’ for an essay I wrote whilst studying for my first degree. I do intend to read the rest soon. The Beauty Myth is a look at history, politics and advertising that shows how false the idea of beauty is and how it stops women from achieving as much as they could. It’s not perfect, it has received a lot of criticism for only really looking at how the beauty myth affects middle-class, white, heterosexual and able-bodied women, and the accuracy of the statistics is often called into question. I’m aware that there are books and articles that go a bit more in depth and up to date, but as an intro to the ideas it presents, I think it does a good job. The third to last paragraph of the ‘Hunger’ chapter, beginning ‘What if she doesn’t worry about her body and eats enough for all the growing she has to do?’ (p179-180 in 0701134313) is one of my favourite paragraphs of all time. I wish I could quote the whole thing here, but it’d probably go beyond fair dealing.

Wasted, by Marya Hornbacher

I’m reading this book at the moment and will post a full review when I’m done. It’s a memoir by a recovering bulimic/anoretic. The author first decided that she was fat at the age of five. It’s well written, but quite heavy going. My head was aching earlier today as I was reading it, just trying to imagine how a child so young would develop these ideas and become so ill. Also, although it’s not a thick paperback, the font is quite small, so it’s not ideal for reading with contacts in. I might have a better time tomorrow when I can just take my glasses off and hold it closer!

Filed Under: Recommendation Lists Tagged With: body image and self-perception month, feminism, Marya Hornbacher, memoir, Naomi Wolf, non-fiction, Sara Shandler, teenage, teenage writers

Book Review: Geisha of Gion, by Mineko Iwasaki

27th June 2010 By Julianne Leave a Comment

Before reading Arthur Golden’s Memoirs of a Geisha, I read a magazine interview with Mineko Iwasaki, who was interviewed extensively by Golden as part of his research. The interview mentioned that Iwasaki was suing Golden for misrepresenting her and the geisha. The geisha in his novel are highly-paid prostitutes as well as graceful entertainers, which was not Iwasaki’s reality, although it may have been for other geisha. She sounded like an interesting person, so after reading and enjoying Memoirs, I bought Geisha of Gion.

If you read both books, you will see a great similarity between the fictional life of Sayuri, and the reality of Mineko Iwasaki. Their childhoods and careers as geisha are almost identical. Ultimately, although Golden’s tale is more dramatic, rich with imagery, and emotionally evoking, I preferred Iwasaki’s memoirs, as I felt they provided more of a fascinating look into the real world of the geisha (or geiko, as Iwasaki explains they were called in her society), as well as an explanation for their shrinking place in the modern world.

The real woman is not so preoccupied by love as her fictional counterpart, she is more career-minded, but she is not wholly serious. One of my favourite parts of this memoir is about when she decided to move out of her geiko house, leaving her servants and adoptive family, and barely knew how to survive in her own flat.
Some readers see Mineko Iwasaki as arrogant, but I disagree. I think she is simply proud of her achievements and talks about them to show how much she gave up when retired. Iwasaki had a very high social status inside the world of the geisha, and achieved fame, but outside it meant nothing, and although she tried to change this, she was unsuccessful. She retired young, dissatisfied and disappointed.

This is an interesting and at times very funny book. I would recommend it particularly to those who read and enjoyed Memoirs of a Geisha.

The BookDepository

Filed Under: Reviews Tagged With: book review, books, geisha, memoir, Mineko Iwasaki, review

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Hi! I'm Julianne and this is my book blog. Click my picture to read more about me.

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