Nonetheless, this is awful, and I realized I needed to read more content
from women authors, thinkers, and members of the legal community.
I have received a number of husbands
from women authors who have emailed me privately and implored me not to mention their names or their wives.
Not exact matches
Take John Gray, the
author of Men Are
From Mars,
Women Are
From Venus.
If that sounds like Men Are
From Mars,
Women Are
From Venus, that's not surprising: Annis has teamed up with John Gray, the
author of that vociferously debated 1992 bestseller, on a new book that explores «gender blind spots» in the workplace.
In a recent conversation about the difficulties that black
women face in the professional sphere, Ibram X. Kendi,
author of Stamped
From The Beginning, The Definitive History of Racist Ideas in America, pointed to the ugly mix of race and misogyny that affects the way black
women are often perceived.
Patti Fletcher, Ph.D., is the
author of Disrupters: Success Strategies
from Women Who Break the Mold (Entrepreneur Press 2018), gender equity advocate and expert authority on how to create a culture of inclusion to drive real business results.
(John Gray, # 1 New York Times bestselling
author of Men Are
from Mars,
Women are
from Venus, What You Feel You Can Heal, and Staying Focused in a Hyper World) «This is a wonderful, thoughtful book that will guide you and inspire you to get complete control over your drinking problem once and for all.»
Pure Barre teacher and
author, Emily Liebert, recently released a new book, «Some
Women,» in which the main characters find inspiration for life
from the Pure Barre mantra, «You're stronger than you think.»
It has endorsements by Jack Canfield, Seth Godin, the founders of BNI and GreenBiz.com, the
author of The New Rules of Green Marketing (among others), and essays
from the
authors of Unstoppable / Unstoppable
Women and Diet for a Small Planet.
Endorsed by 22 prominent business and environmental leaders including Chicken Soup co-creator Jack Canfield and innovation blogger /
author Seth Godin, the book also includes guest essays
from Cynthia Kersey (
author of Unstoppable and Unstoppable
Women) and Frances Moore Lappé (
author of Diet for a Small Planet and many other books on food and democracy).
Dr. Fletcher is the
author of Disrupters: Success Strategies
From Women Who Break the Mold, a seasoned tech executive, award - winning marketing influencer, board member, angel investor, speaker, and granddaughter of an Armenian Genocide survivor.
Loden, who has written three books, said much has changed
from when she worked for one supervisor who used to tell her to smile more and another who invited John Molloy, the
author of «Dress for Success,» to assess
women supervisors» attire and tell some why they were never going to make it.
«I hope the Brits have better luck than Canadians in convincing Mark Carney to address concerns raised about the absence of
women from that nation's bank notes,» said
author and historian Merna Forster, one of the Canadian activists.
David Johnston,
author of Earth, Empire and Sacred Text, Christine Schirrmacher, a scholar with the Institute of Islamic Studies of the Evangelical Alliance in Germany, Austria, and Switzerland, and Joseph Cumming, director of the reconciliation program at Yale Divinity School, discuss whether Christians should support laws that ban Muslim
women from wearing the face veil in public.
In this fearless, funny, and refreshingly relatable chronicle of her own metamorphosis
from the insecurity that once held her captive,
author Kayla Aimee unfolds the blueprint for
women to identify the deep - seated sources of our assumed inadequacy and replace them with steadfast truths of affirmation and replace our need for approval with the promise of an enduring acceptance.
She edits «The Monastic Way,» a monthly periodical of daily meditations, and is the
author of several books, including The Story of Ruth, Twelve Moments in Every
Woman's Life; The Friendship of
Women: A Spiritual Tradition; and Wisdom Distilled
from the Daily: Living the Rule of St. Benedict Today.
As we have seen, the story about the
women at the tomb, on the showing of the
authors themselves, circumstantial as it is, remains inconclusive as evidence apart
from further verification.
Negative attitudes toward the idea of
women as senior pastors are well documented in Edward C. Lehman, Jr.'s, sociological study Women Clergy: Breaking Through Gender Barriers (Transaction, 1985) The author analyzed detailed responses from 1,720 Presbyterian lay - people and 1,143 Presbyterian clergy concerning a wide range of attitudes toward women in mini
women as senior pastors are well documented in Edward C. Lehman, Jr.'s, sociological study
Women Clergy: Breaking Through Gender Barriers (Transaction, 1985) The author analyzed detailed responses from 1,720 Presbyterian lay - people and 1,143 Presbyterian clergy concerning a wide range of attitudes toward women in mini
Women Clergy: Breaking Through Gender Barriers (Transaction, 1985) The
author analyzed detailed responses
from 1,720 Presbyterian lay - people and 1,143 Presbyterian clergy concerning a wide range of attitudes toward
women in mini
women in ministry.
She is
author of God's Daughters: Evangelical
Women and the Power of Submission, forthcoming
from the University of California Press.
Women Preaching: Theology and Practice Through the Ages by Eunjoo Mary Kim (another one by this
author: Preaching the Presence of God: A Homiletic
from an Asian American Perspective)
The biggest names in
women's ministry —
from Hatmaker to
authors like Shauna Niequist — remain intimately involved in their own local churches, and most have Bible college or seminary degrees.
Despite the pastoral nature of much feminist theology and careful treatments of specific issues in pastoral care such as abuse or spirituality, there is no book by a single
author on pastoral theology
from a
woman's or a feminist perspective.
Problem definition is time - consuming, a deep journey into our own prejudices and hopes for a Christian faith that actually makes a difference, a horrible awakening that giants of the faith may have little faith in God and more in courts and money, that fame - seekers exist within the church system and garner friends as shields, that a man that marries a second wife may wish to destroy the first wife at any cost, and that
authors can indeed write good books but run away
from women speaking of their own abuse, and that prior friendships dictate the limits of Christianity....
Expect to hear many a sermon
from the pulpit over the next decades on such topics as «ambiguous gender imagery,» «God as
woman,» and how St. Luke's Gospel «is an attempt to legitimize male dominance in the Christianity of the
author's time.»
The book was The Irrational Season
from the Crosswicks Journals and the
author, my
woman of valor, was, of course, Madeleine L'Engle.
Focusing on sex trafficking, gender - based violence, and maternal mortality, the
authors masterfully incorporate colorful stories of real
women who have both suffered
from oppression and triumphed over it in order to make the case that «
women aren't the problem but the solution.»
«Historically, we've had so much literature,
from every side of the aisle, describing what it means to be a godly
woman,» says Margaret Bendroth, adjunct professor at Andover Newton Theological Seminary and
author of Fundamentalism and Gender.
Whether they believe it was written by God / god or a human
author (let alone translated
from one language to another over many years and the interpretations of those words taught / passed down over many years with many different understandings which formed with even the best intentions by men and
women who were products of their time and place?)
But seriously, it's surely giving into a caricature of Christianity to suggest that the
author of Genesis 1 - 2 and St Paul taught that
women are inferior to men and certainly far, far away
from the Catholic interpretation of those texts.
Nonetheless,
women, native Americans, African - Americans and Muslims are among the
authors of my «biblical» books, and voices of the commentators —
from Frederick Douglass to Rosa Parks and Gloria Steinem to Alan Greenspan — are far more diverse.
What started with the SkinnygirlMargarita
from the mind of «Bethenny» talk show host, New York Times Bestselling
Author, entrepreneur and cocktail «fixologist» Bethenny Frankel has turned into a cocktail phenomenon, offering innovative, low - calorie options for
women who want it all.
The book's
author, Naama Bloom, founded HelloFlo, a company that's all about
women's health and feminine care, so she knows what girls are asking, everything
from how to insert a tampon to soldiering on despite PMS.
«Once you strip away the stigma
from the equation, interest in casual sex is about equal for
women and men,» Daniel Bergner, author of the brilliant book What Do Women
women and men,» Daniel Bergner,
author of the brilliant book What Do
Women Women Want?
In her research on professional
women and the relationship with the caregivers they hire, sociologist Cameron Macdonald,
author of Shadow Mothers: Nannies, Au Pairs, and the Micropolitics of Mothering, says that in their desire to be their child's No. 1, some moms only keep caregivers around for a year so their child won't get too attached — thus depriving their child of long - term, stable and loving relationships, and the moms themselves
from the help they actually need.
The
authors of The Breastfeeding Book: Everything You Need to Know About Nursing Your Child
from Birth Through Weaning say
women who have not breastfed are four times more likely to develop osteoporosis later in life.
What the
authors should have told us was that there were two neonatal deaths (0.11 %) among
women planning a home birth and four (0.03 %)
from women planning to give birth in the hospital.
Lead
author,
from the pediatrics department at
Women and Infants Hospital in Providence, R.I., Dr. Betty R. Vohr, says, «We know that talking and playing with an infant improves cognitive and language skills.
Today's recommendations come
from Amy Allen Clark,
author of The Good Life For Less and founder of MomAdvice, a community for
women who are looking for ways to stay organized, stay sane, and stay within their budget.
From the numerous conversations (both on the telephone and via email) that MomsTEAM's Senior Health and Safety Editor, Lindsey Barton Straus, and I have had over the years with our friends at US Lacrosse, especially CEO, Steve Stenersen (who I started talking to way back in 1999 - 2000), director of health and sport safety, Bruce Griffin (who was one of the principal
authors of the draft standard), and Ann Carpenetti, vice president of lacrosse operations and co-chair of the
women's lacrosse headgear task group, I am confident that the draft standard is based on sound science.
October 27, 2015 • Drawing
from experiences living in the South and wanting to counter older portrayals, the
author of Morning Edition's latest book club pick sought to craft «a strong
woman who doesn't self - destruct.»
A blog that is dedicated to how great you the
author is and how she is heroically saving
women from the menace of natural childbirth pointing a finger at a lactivist as a narcissist is so ironic, I don't even know where to begin.
Stefanie Wilder - Taylor is the
author of Sippy Cups Are Not for Chardonnay, Naptime Is the New Happy Hour, and It's Not Me, It's You: Subjective Recollections
from a Terminally Optimistic, Chronically Sarcastic and Occasionally Inebriated
Woman.
The
authors concluded that there was no harm in advising
women with diabetes in pregnancy at low risk of complications to hand express colostrum
from 36 weeks gestation.
From her essay, it appears that the
author objected less to the commitment of marriage than to the fact that being a married
woman made her seem conventional.
Johnsen, Claudia Rachel MOMS, BABIES AND BREASTFEEDING 1st Books, 2004 Adapted
from the
author's doctoral dissertation, this book examines why some
women continue to breastfeed despite facing various problems.
In her book The Way We Never Were: American Families and the Nostalgia Trap,
Author Stephanie Coontz attempts to separate the myths surrounding reminiscence of the good old days
from the often harsh realities that
women and children faced in the past.
Authors» conclusions: There is no strong evidence
from randomised trials to favour either planned hospital birth or planned home birth for low ‐ risk pregnant
women.
The
authors do a fabulous job of including quotes
from woman and experts all around the country that offer varying opinions.
Dagmara Scalise,
author of Twin Sense: A Sanity - Saving Guide to Raising Twins —
From Pregnancy Through the First Year, shares some valuable pointers on how to deal with wildly inappropriate questions a pregnant
women will most likely encounter on a regular basis.
The
authors concluded that there is no strong evidence
from randomized trials to favor either planned hospital birth or planned home birth for low - risk pregnant
women.