Loading

Journeys for the girls (and women)

Woolf’s , Gertrude Stein’s flat – feminist pilgrimages are a great way to connect with history. So when Vera Groskop said girls were boring, her mother decided it was time for her first trip Despite my best efforts, my three-year-old daughter Vera hasn’t exactly been celebrating her girlhood of late. In fact, influenced by her six-year-old brother, she can frequently be heard muttering, “Girls are boring. I want to do boys’ things.” I can see her point. Her brother’s life is full of Star Wars, pirates, football and other action-packed phenomena. Vera gets Hello Kitty. She clearly finds this unsatisfying, and the situation is coming to a head. “I am not a girl, Mummy, I am a boy,” she told me recently. “My name is Peter.” But it’s good to be a girl, I tell her. Being a girl is fun. There are women’s successes to be celebrated. There is joy in the female condition. How can I prove this though? In our home city, London, there is just not that much physical evidence of women’s greatness. The Alison Lapper statue in Trafalgar Square was taken down in 2007

Original Source Journeys for the girls (and women)

Add this post to your favorites social bookmark

Bookmark and Share

Leave a Reply