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Does God Hate Women? Hardcover – 4 Jun 2009

4 out of 5 stars 8 customer reviews

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 214 pages
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury 3PL; 1 edition (4 Jun. 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0826498264
  • ISBN-13: 978-0826498267
  • Product Dimensions: 13.2 x 2.3 x 20.1 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 541,926 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
  • See Complete Table of Contents

Product Description

Review

Author article (topic of book), book mention, The Observer. 31 May 2009.

Discussion of book, contents and potential impact (no review) concerning book's thoughts on Muslim female abuse and Mohammad's 'Child Bride', timesonline.co.uk. 31 May 2009.

Article on book in Muslim Weekly, 5 June 2009.

Author Q & A and title mention in New Statesman.

'Fans of Richard Dawkins will love it' - Sholto Byrnes, Independent on Sunday

'Ophelia Benson and Jeremy Stangroom are the editors of Butterflies and Wheels, the best atheist site on the web. In Does God Hate Women? they forensically dismantle the last respectable misogyny ... By the end of this book-length blast, Benson and Stangroom have left religious hatred of women in rubble. Anybody not addled by superstition will have to conclude that such bigotry deserves neither respect nor deference.' - Johann Hari, New Statesman

'At a time when too many people bend over backwards to avoid offending the sensibilities of those with a belief in the supernatural, Benson and Stangroom provide a breath of fresh air. They subject the core beliefs of the world's leading faiths to the rigorous analysis they sometimes escape out of a misplaced fear of giving offence ... All this desperately needs to be said ... As this book reminds us, religion brings with it patriarchal ideas about gender difference which claim to honour women but almost always give men power over them.' - Joan Smith, The Independent

Article on book by Madeleine Bunting, Guardian, 16 June 2009.

Title and The Times article discussed in Private Eye, June 2009.

Reviewed in The Observer, July 2009.

Reviewd in Morning Star, August 2009. http: //www.morningstaronline.co.uk/index.php/culture/books/non_fiction/does_god_hate_women

'The predecessors of today's critics would have hailed [this book] as a feminist classic.' - Standpoint

'We may want to react to the title of this book with a defensive "No, of course not." It will be more useful to acknowledge the challenge posed by the authors' refusal to avoid awk-ward questions. We should consider the extent to which the way, we think, we are presenting our faith matches what those out-side the Church actually perceive.' - Church Times

"As I read "Does GodHate Women, "I was impressed by the many probing questions that the writersfocused on in the three great monotheistic religions."Network, February 2010

'At a time when too many people bendover backwards to avoid offending the sensibilities of those with a belief inthe supernatural, Benson and Stangroom provide a breath of fresh air. Theysubject the core beliefs of the world's leading faiths to the rigorous analysisthey sometimes escape out of a misplaced fear of giving offence ... All this desperately needs to besaid ... As this book remindsus, religion brings with it patriarchal ideas about gender difference whichclaim to honour women but almost always give men power over them.' - Joan Smith, The Independent

"As I read "Does God Hate Women, "I was impressed by the many probing questions that the writers focused on in the three great monotheistic religions."Network, February 2010

About the Author

Ophelia Benson is editor of www.butterfliesandwheels.com, deputy editor of The Philosophers' Magazine and co-author, with Jeremy Stangroom, of Why Truth Matters. She is also a frequent contributor to Free Inquiry.'


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Top Customer Reviews

Format: Hardcover
I finished reading this book a few days ago and am planning to read it again already. An absolute must read. As someone of Muslim descent i know only too well the realities of violence and abuse visited upon women and girls across the world. This book, however, does not focus on any one single religion but looks across faiths and highlights the terrible atrocities perpetrated against women and girls in the name of religion and God. I DO NOT need to know what 'freedoms' various religions may or may not have given women and girls in the past. The questions is 'What do we all do about violence against women and girls now?'
It's time for us all to stand up and be counted and demand an end to the brutality. Women and girls make up more than half the world's population and yet those in power are relatively silent on the violencethey suffer except when it suits their own ends e.g. Afghanistan - the Taliban and those before had been attacking women and girls long before 9/11. Enough is enough - we must rise up and end the violence NOW!
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Format: Hardcover
for all those women who don't bother to vote and every teenaged girl in the country. A lot of men could benefit from it too - it might have the same revelatory effect as Edward Shorter's "A History of Women's Bodies" had on my father when he snaffled my copy.

A cogent assessment of the iniquities visited on women in the name of religion over large parts of the globe and in some instances here. A rational, reasoned argument which carries infinitely more weight than the snide diatribes of Hitchens and the slight sense of hysteria one gets from Dawkins.

Things have moved on considerably in my lifetime but anyone who has ever been asked to get their father to guarantee a bank loan or whose mother had to get her husband to approve a credit agreement or who was at one time ineligible for a mortgage because she was female will recognise that these were only watered down versions of the mysogyny inculcated by religion.

We should all remember that things can regress as well as progress, and value and protect the freedoms we now enjoy. They could so easily be revoked as the patriarchal religions fight their rearguard action. I happened in Germany in the 30s and has happened more recently in Egypt - the price of freedom is eternal vigilance - the more so for women. We can never take it for granted.
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Format: Hardcover
The Universal declaration Of Human Rights (UDHR) was drawn up after the Nazi genocide, the forced labour on the Burma railway, the bombings of Dresden, Tokyo, Hiroshima and Nagasaki and the immense death toll in the Soviet Union which wiped out 10 per cent of the population.

The words in the UDHR were chosen very carefully so as not to give emphasis to any particular religion and to help the declaration become universally applied throughout the world (not achieved so far, but nevertheless a worthy cause still worth fighting for).

This wasn't good enough for the fans of Sharia law who have come up with their own version of the UDHR (The Cairo Declaration On Human Rights In Islam - CDHRI) which contains statements like this :-

"All human beings form one family whose members are united by submission to God and descent from Adam..........."

and other such nonsense, which emphatically loads the dice in favour of men and against women, also it doesn't support secularism and the right not to believe in God.

The supporters of CDHRI believe that the the UDHR is loaded towards a Western secular concept of Judeo-Christian origin, incompatible with Sharia law.

In other words they want to go their own way as regards Human Rights, but in so doing they have created a document which could be used by people who are actually working against Human Rights.

The absurd CDHRI is nicely contrasted with the UDHR in this very readable and badly needed book by Benson and Stangroom.

As Nick Cohen says the book "is both a joy to read and a call to arms".

Now get out there and arm yourself, and I don't just mean the women amongst you !
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This book is challenging, topical and really gets to the heart of a number of issues concerning women and religion. 5 stars all round because it challenged my thinking and was well written too.
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