Enter my first review of the summer.
I'll admit, when I removed candy-colored tissue paper on my 21st birthday to uncover a paperback copy of Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide, I was slightly confused. Maybe it was the quizzical look my roommate shot me; maybe it was the mimosa. Don't get me wrong, I'm ALL for women's rights, but I just couldn't wrap my mind around the idea of receiving a birthday gift with the word "oppression" emblazoned across the cover. Then I did my research, and found out that this book, written by Nicholas Kristoff and Sheryl WuDunn, both New York Times journalists and the first couple ever to receive a Pulitzer Prize (yeah, I know), is a national bestseller, has been voted one of the 10 Best Books of the Year by the Washington Post in 2009, etc. So as summertime set in and my library fines prevented me from utilizing its services, I cracked it open and began to read.
You know how friends sometimes know you better than you know yourself? Yeah, this was one of those times. Currently eating crow, be back soon.
Half the Sky focuses on three major ways in which women and girls are globally oppressed: sex trafficking and forced prostitution, gender-based violence, and maternal mortality. Although these issues occur on every inhabited continent, they are particularly prevalent in developing countries in Asia and Africa, the locations upon which this book focuses. Having recently done a project on commercial sex trafficking in New York City, I was emotionally prepared for the testimonies I read about 13-year-old girls from Cambodia who think they're going to another country to pick fruit and make money for their families, but end up in a brothel where they are systematically beaten and raped. Same goes for the distraught tales of gender-base violence, which is so deeply embedded in some conservative religions that some surveyed women actually agree that husbands have a right to beat their wives. But the rate at which maternal mortality occurs in countries like Niger (1 in 7 girls and women will die during childbirth here), and the causes of these deaths (enter obstetric fistulas, caused by failed childbirth and results in holes forming between the rectum and vagina, or the bladder and vagina. I considered sparing you the graphic details, but then I realized, that's exactly the problem), truly shook me. I can only imagine the contorted facial expressions I displayed on Muni as I read the visceral tales of young girls left, essentially, to die in huts because the cultures in which they were brought up place women's medical needs at the bottom of its priority list.
On deck: a heart-wrenching and poetic tale written by an esteemed Latin American author (See? I still love me my love stories!)


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