Vendor | |
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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher |
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Original language | |
English | |
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HARD TO DO
The Surprising, Feminst History of Breaking Up
From Jane Austen to Taylor Swift, a look at the surprising politics of romantic love and its dissolution.
Whatever the underlying motives be they love, financial security, or mere masochism the fact is that getting involved in a romantic partnership is emotionally, morally, and even politically fraught.
In Hard To Do, Kelli María Korducki turns a Marxist lens on the relatively short history of romantic partnership, tracing how the socio-economic dynamics between men and women have transformed the ways women conceive of domestic partnership. With perceptive, reported insights on the ways marriage and divorce are legislated, the rituals of twentieth-century courtship, and contemporary practices for calling it off, Korducki reveals that, for all women, choosing to end a relationship is a radical action with very limited cultural precedent.
Kelli Marìa Korducki is a journalist and cultural critic. Her byline has appeared frequently in the Globe and Mail and National Post, as well as in the New Inquiry, NPR, The Walrus, Vice, the Hairpin, and many more publications in print and online. In 2012 she was named one of five young journalists 'most likely to succeed' by the Ryerson Review of Journalism and was nominated for a 2015 National Magazine Award for 'Tiny Triumphs,' a 10,000-word meditation on the humble hot dog forLittle Brother Magazine.She is also a former editor-in-chief of the popular daily news blog, Torontoist, where she helped to cultivate a diverse roster of offbeat culture reporters and essayists. She is based in Brooklyn and Toronto.
In Hard To Do, Kelli María Korducki turns a Marxist lens on the relatively short history of romantic partnership, tracing how the socio-economic dynamics between men and women have transformed the ways women conceive of domestic partnership. With perceptive, reported insights on the ways marriage and divorce are legislated, the rituals of twentieth-century courtship, and contemporary practices for calling it off, Korducki reveals that, for all women, choosing to end a relationship is a radical action with very limited cultural precedent.
Kelli Marìa Korducki is a journalist and cultural critic. Her byline has appeared frequently in the Globe and Mail and National Post, as well as in the New Inquiry, NPR, The Walrus, Vice, the Hairpin, and many more publications in print and online. In 2012 she was named one of five young journalists 'most likely to succeed' by the Ryerson Review of Journalism and was nominated for a 2015 National Magazine Award for 'Tiny Triumphs,' a 10,000-word meditation on the humble hot dog forLittle Brother Magazine.She is also a former editor-in-chief of the popular daily news blog, Torontoist, where she helped to cultivate a diverse roster of offbeat culture reporters and essayists. She is based in Brooklyn and Toronto.
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Book
Published 2018-05-22 by Coach House Books |
Book
Published 2018-05-22 by Coach House Books |