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E.J.
E.J. is on page 97 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“that said, looking harder at Greece and Rome, helps us to look harder at ourselves, and to understand better how we have learned to think as we do.“
Jan 16, 2026 07:32PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 96 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“thankfully, not everything we do or think goes back directly or indirectly to the Greeks and Romans; and I often find myself insisting that there are no simple lessons for us in the history of the ancient world.”
Jan 16, 2026 07:31PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 86 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“You cannot easily fit women into a structure that is already coded as male; you have to change the structure. That means thinking about power differently.”
Jan 16, 2026 07:05PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 45 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“ what we need is some old-fashioned consciousness-raising about what we mean by ‘the voice of authority’ and how we’ve come to construct it.”
Jan 15, 2026 09:37AM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 36 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“it doesn’t matter what line you take as a woman, if you venture into traditional male territory, the abuse comes anyway. It is not what you say that prompts it, it is simply the fact that you’re saying it.”
Jan 15, 2026 09:30AM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 31 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“It is still the case that when listeners hear a female voice, they do not hear a voice that connotes authority; or rather, they have not learned how to hear authority in it . . . They do not tend to hear a voice of expertise either; at least, not outside the traditional spheres of women’s sectional interests.”
Jan 13, 2026 09:41PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 30 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
When calling women “whiny” as they express how they feel about something, Bard writes, “do those words matter? Of course they do, because they underpin an idiom that acts to remove the authority, the force, even the humor from what women have to say. It is an idiom that effectively repositions women back into the domestic sphere; it trivializes their words, or it re-privatizes them.”
Jan 13, 2026 07:51PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 21 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“we are not simply the victims or dupes of our classical inheritance but classical traditions have provided us with a powerful template for thinking about public speech, and for deciding what counts as good oratory or bad, persuasive or not, and whose speech is to be given space to be heard. And gender is obviously an important part of that mix.”
Jan 13, 2026 07:35PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 20 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“This is not the peculiar ideology of some distant culture. Distant in time it may be. But I want to underline that this is a tradition of gendered speaking – in the theorising of gendered speaking – to which we are still, directly or more often indirectly, the heirs.”
Jan 13, 2026 07:26PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 17 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“Public speech was - if not THE - defining attribute of maleness . . . A woman speaking in public was, in most circumstances, by definition not a woman.”
Jan 13, 2026 07:24PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 13 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“There are only two main exceptions in the classical world to the abomination of women’s public speaking. First, women are allowed to speak out as a victims and as a martyrs, usually to preface their own death.”
Jan 13, 2026 07:21PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 8 of 115 of Women & Power: A Manifesto
“if we want to understand - and do something about - the fact that women, even when they are not silenced, still have to pay a very high price for being heard, we need to recognize that it is a bit more complicated and that there is a long backstory.”
Jan 13, 2026 05:43PM Add a comment
Women & Power: A Manifesto

E.J.
E.J. is on page 146 of 456 of Rise of the Evening Star (Fablehaven, #2)
“ no matter how careful you are, there is always the chance of running across something more terrible than you are prepared to handle.”
Aug 05, 2025 11:02AM Add a comment
Rise of the Evening Star (Fablehaven, #2)

E.J.
E.J. is on page 132 of 456 of Rise of the Evening Star (Fablehaven, #2)
“Ignorance is no longer a shield.”
Aug 05, 2025 07:10AM Add a comment
Rise of the Evening Star (Fablehaven, #2)

E.J.
E.J. is on page 132 of 456 of Rise of the Evening Star (Fablehaven, #2)
“Running toward danger is foolhardy. But so is closing your eyes to it. Many perils become less dangerous once you understand their potential hazards.”
Aug 05, 2025 07:09AM Add a comment
Rise of the Evening Star (Fablehaven, #2)

E.J.
E.J. is on page 120 of 200 of Peter Pan
Aug 02, 2025 12:33PM Add a comment
Peter Pan

E.J.
E.J. is on page 4 of 456 of Rise of the Evening Star (Fablehaven, #2)
“Sometimes it was safe to leave certain things unseen.”
Aug 02, 2025 12:32PM Add a comment
Rise of the Evening Star (Fablehaven, #2)

E.J.
E.J. is starting The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story
“History revealed the building blocks of the world I now inhabited, explaining how communities, institutions, relationships came to be. Learning history made the world makes sense. It provided the key to decode all that I saw around me.”
Nov 11, 2024 01:08PM Add a comment
The 1619 Project: A New Origin Story

E.J.
E.J. is on page 236 of 1142 of It
“A silence fell amid the three of them. It was not an entirely uncomfortable silence. In it they became friends.”
Apr 08, 2024 10:27AM Add a comment
It

E.J.
E.J. is on page 185 of 1142 of It
“[Arlene Hanscom] looked out thethe window and uttered a sigh that was full of trouble. ‘There’s something ugly about this town. I’ve always thought so.’”
Mar 31, 2024 05:16PM Add a comment
It

E.J.
E.J. is on page 176 of 1142 of It
“Ben Hanscom had no sense of being lonely because he had never been anything but . . . loneliness encompassed his life and overreached it.

Beverly was a sweet dream; the candy was a sweet reality. The candy was his friend.”
Mar 31, 2024 11:02AM Add a comment
It

E.J.
E.J. is on page 133 of 1142 of It
‘I am remembering my boyhood at last, he thought. I am remembering how I spent my own summer vacation in that dim dead year of 1958 . . . Oh God if I could only forget it all again.’
Mar 22, 2024 09:31AM Add a comment
It

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