Wendy Shalit
With humor and piercing insight, Shalit invites us to look beyond the blush and consider the new power to be found in an old ideal. She maintains that the sex education curriculum forced on those of her generation from an early age is fundamentally flawed
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Wendy Shalit was born in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and received her Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy from Williams College in 1997. Her essays on literary and cultural topics have appeared in the Wall Street Journal, The New York Times and other publications.

Her first book, A Return to Modesty: Discovering the Lost Virtue, was published by the Free Press in 1999.

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A Return to Modesty: Discovering the Lost Virtue

The Good Girl Revolution: Young Rebels with Self-Esteem and High Standards


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"I cannot express to you how grateful I am to you for coming and speaking last night. It was one of the best turnouts we've ever had for an event, and the audience was probably the most receptive I've ever seen. It was such a pleasure meeting you, and you have been such an inspiration to myself, and I'm sure everyone in that audience last night. "

Jenna Felts, Fordham University
A Return to Modesty: Discovering the Lost Virtue
The 23-year-old author first heard of "modestyniks"--Orthodox Jewish women who withhold physical contact from men until marriage--while a freshman at Williams College. She was initially fascinated by the way in which they cleave to old ideals, especially amid a sexually saturated contemporary world. But more so, Wendy Shalit was aghast at how modestyniks are dismissed as sick, delusional, or repressed by the secular community. "Why," asks the author, "is sexual modesty so threatening to some that they can only respond to it with charges of abuse or delusion?"

In her thoughtful three-part essay, the author reveals an impressive reading list as she probes the cultural history of sexual modesty for women and considers whether this virtue may be beneficial in today's world--if not an antidote to misogyny. In an age when women are embarrassed by sexual inexperience, when sex education is introduced as early as primary school, and when women suffer more than ever from eating disorders, stalking, sexual harassment, and date rape, Shalit believes a return to modesty may place women on equal footing with men. She yearns for a time when conservatives can believe the claims of feminists and feminists can differentiate between patriarchy and misogyny and share in the dialectic of female sexuality.

While the young author's argument is often limited by naiveté and her own lack of experience, her profound intelligence and daring are undeniable. A Return to Modesty is a thought-provoking debut that introduces an original and exciting new feminist thinker. --Kera Bolonik --This text refers to the Hardcover edition. Amazon book review

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