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In Defense of Witches
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Feb NF - RatW - In Defense of Witches
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I'm planning to join in - just got a copy from my local library!
I'm currently reading 2 books at the moment, so will likely join mid-month.


1. Once I read the interview I linked in comment 1, I understood that I shouldn't expect a great deal relating to witches. Here's the quote: "I wanted to write about child-free women and aging women. I couldn’t decide between the two subjects, and neither was satisfying on its own. Then I thought, I could write a book about women who are not socially accepted. I realized that both these kinds of women are, in their own way, witches." And so she does. That made me much happier with the end result than if I'd gone in with my initial expectation, oh, goody - another book where I'll learn even more about witch trials - but now in France. Not.
2. It was a 5* read for me, notwithstanding most of Chapter 4. (just me, on multiple points, not a warning.) I recommend consuming it in as big chunks as you can; the flow of her arguments is more compelling the longer she has to make them to you without interruption.
3. I haven't read a lot of feminist ranting in the last 18 months, so even though most of this is not new to me, it was a super refresher. Plus, I really enjoyed reading an author who isn't either British or American hold forth on these topics. The differentiators were interesting, and I picked up several new-to-me authors to check out.
4. Chapter 1, the Intro, was a bit meandering and way too long for my taste. Chapters 2 - on childfree women, married and single, and 3 - post-menopausal women, were great, screaming, well-organized and -grounded rants. Chapter 4 covers healthcare practices and nature/environment.
5. I could listen to this narrator read the dictionary. I'm less sure that I'd enjoy everything of Chollet's, but I will look for her current book - Reinventing Love: How the Patriarchy Sabotages Heterosexual Relations and see if second time's as good as the first.
p.s. if you ARE interested in witches, historically and globally, I highly recommend Witchcraft: A History in Thirteen Trials by Marion Gibson.

I enjoyed getting to see Chollet and hear her speak. I'm a long-term Steinem stan, so enjoying her graciousness and clarity is par for the course.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Demogra...
https://www.un.org/development/desa/p...
https://www.macrotrends.net/global-me...
I wonder how much the choice to be child-free garners societal disapproval worldwide. Anecdotally, it's been acceptable my whole adult life in the US to declare you don't want kids and - again, anecdotally, if you're in a group of women 35 and younger, declaring that you want kids makes you a bit of an outlier and you need to defend your choice. I suspect there's quite a big urban /rural divide on this topic, but I believe it's generally quite common for 20-something couples to be aligned without much angst about not having kids. So one of the most interesting things to me about Chapter 2 was that I sensed Chollet is passionate about justifying and arming young women to be comfortable deciding not to have kids for many reasons, including, supporting their desire to focus on living the lives they want to live, supporting their personal goals - whether career or other passions - that would be impeded by child-raising. As if she needs to move a big rock in France.


Great to see you here, Agnieszka. So right about the painful details. I really like her delivery though. It’s not humorous, but there’s enough charisma that she never depressed me.

#1 on your thoughts list Carol convinced me I should join in on this read. I have a wait for the physical book from the library so I downloaded the audio on Hoopla.
I also plan on making some time to check out your links as well.
Thanks for the nudge.

It’s truly a great read, Sophie. Can’t wait to read your thoughts on it.

Carol, thanks for mentioning this!
I have a copy from the library but just checked and there's audio available through Hoopla. I love a good narrator, especially for non-fiction.
I'm not sure I would have gotten through or enjoyed Orbital as much otherwise :)

I just read her remarks on suffixes and the introduction of Ms. in the 60’s. It was so interesting to read about the French reaction and thoughts on madame, mademoiselle, and the proffered Psse. for Princess.
So far, very interesting and entertaining. As much as I do enjoy the audio, I feel like this would be a great one to take notes and quote, so hopefully a digital or hard copy becomes available from my library soon.

Yes! Ms was such a lightening rod for conflict for decades. It’s probably difficult for younger (than me) women to believe how offensive it was to many people for women to have an opinion about their names and form of address. It was the precursor battle to the hate some have for pronoun announcements in an email signature.

Taking in the world’s population, I don’t see any sort of population issue arising from people choosing not to procreate.

It’s a big issue in any country that is trending at a rate lower than replacement. South Korea is looking at some super big issues. Any country that doesn’t have a safety net for the elderly, but relies on social expectations of daughters and daughter-in-law is facing crisis, too. In the US, if there are more people receiving SS payments than are working/paying in to the SS fund, we also have a big problem. World population can seem fine, but we don’t age as one under one set of social constraints and economic structures. Hope that makes sense.

I’m in the final part, about aging and older women. I’m finding this book pretty fascinating, and trying to hold off my pre-opinions on diversity, but it seems to be pretty Euro-centric, focusing on France. I enjoy the tidbits on America, of course, but really enjoy reading from a modern French woman’s perspective. Which is fine, it’s her book, I just wonder if she does tackle any diversity issues before the end. So far, I’d already put it up there with some (what I would consider) basic feminist readings. It’s almost like a smaller, modern The Second Sex although Beauvoir does a lot of deep dives.
It’s also made me so curious if there are similar books by other women from different countries (like Korea so I can learn about their birth rate issues) and I know I’m going to end up down a rabbit hole.

I’m in the final part, abou..."
I think all of this is fair, Anita. I don’t recall her contemplating diversity in any meaningful way. It is France-focused. It’s a worthwhile rabbit hole 🤣💕

They aren’t alone. But they’re in the worst position globally.
This is a quick read that lays out the economic impact. In the short term, lower fertility rates’ initial goodness but later burden, and the intersection between immigration and birth rates. https://cepr.org/voxeu/columns/confro....
*I’m in the ER with my spouse - probably reading more quickly and less thoughtfully than normal - so if I’ve picked articles that have issues, grant grace, please. (He’ll be fine but we couldn’t get attention to an issue that was increasingly serious.)


I totally agree about the hard copy! I love listening to it, but finding that pausing for the quotes just doesn’t work for me in that format. Usually while I’m working it cooking. I’m waiting on my library to have one available. Looking forward to anything you share with us

When she asked where were all the elder feminists, I wondered myself. There must be a new group that has aged into the category unawares. I felt, for the first time, that I might be cusping this group since this final section resonated with me the most. When I was younger the most I cared about healthcare was that I had access to it and women have free choice. I realize now how important it is that women are even heard and represented by their doctors, since so many women’s issues are just now making headway like perimenopause and PCOS or endometriosis.
All in all I loved the information in here and would add it to the canon.


Chollet navigates through the decades of the feminist movement while frequently jumping back to historical centuries of atrocities against women.
As Chollet explores the feminist movement, I reflect on my own experiences in the early 1970s, such as being turned down for credit in my own name. When I was an attendant at a girlfriend's wedding, I was told by her mother, "always a bridesmaid, never a bride." I was barely 21 years old! After reading The Population Bomb, I was convinced I would not have children. When I revealed this to a friend's mother, she severely scolded me, calling me selfish.
Now I look at my grandchildren and the choices they can make thanks to the voices of women who fought for those rights. One granddaughter, in her mid-thirties, recently became a mom by choice without a man in her life. She has a career, and although it's a struggle being far from family, she has no regrets. Her sister, though married, has decided to be childless. Yet another sister, with an advanced degree in engineering, often complains that she is always the one asked to get coffee by her all-male colleagues.
The part of the book that horrified me the most was about the medical care system. Female patients bear the brunt of a "men’s locker-room" scenario. Chollet provides examples, such as comments overheard about women’s bodies while they are under sedation on the operating table, and the experience of a young woman who overheard her gynecologist describing her breasts to a colleague, resulting in laughter. Chollet criticizes the annual gynecological check-up as an "immutable ritual," a "sacred obligation" from puberty onward, arguing that it is about "maintaining surveillance of women’s bodies."
She also cites Marie-Hélène Lahaye, who reported on social media that doctors and students were allowed to internally examine patients while they were unconscious without their consent. Lahaye suggested on Twitter that, if these exams were truly neutral acts, medical students could practice on each other.
The book includes thirty-eight pages of references, with numerous citations from articles, films, and books, making it a bit overwhelming at times.

Isabelle, I am about halfway and completely agree.
I did think there would be more of a focus on the history of witches and their persecution. There is that of course, and I appreciate the connections to modern-day issues. It's not really what I was expecting, but I'm enjoying (& getting a lot out of) it!


Totally agree with horrifying as the descriptor for the medical section. It was essentially a giant list of reasons why we need women in the medical field.

I wonder what the author would think of our world now, just 7 years after writing this book.
Mostly, I was disappointed in this one.
While I can appreciate each topic addressed, it wasn't what I was expecting. I wanted a deeper dive into the witches of our past, how they changed things, how they fought, etc. And an introduction to more of the witches of our present - which this book does touch on, but sporadically.
The first third of the book was satisfying, but the rest didn't seem connected. Almost like it should have been 2 separate books.
I think I'm an outlier here, so if you're still reading don't let my comments dissuade. Perhaps I just went into it expecting something different.

I agree. That section was a bit of a slog for me.

I wonder what the author would think of our world now, just 7 years after writing this book.
Mostly, I was disappointed in this one.
While I can ..."
No problem at all, Lindsay. I’m glad you and Isabelle are sharing your thoughts, whether or not laudatory; I think it’s interesting that this 60-year old found the section in post-menopausal women less engaging, and the earlier section addressing the limits having kids may place on your career and development of yourself fascinated me in part because I don’t think it’s been okay to say that in the US - publicly- in decades.
Since this one didn’t feed my witch interest, I plan to read Borders Witch Hunt by Mary W. Craig soon-ish.
I am really glad I read this, though, to hear the difference in the way feminist themes are discussed outside the US and UK.

Interesting Carol!
I was thoroughly bored halfway through the section about women's choices to not have children. I'm wondering if that's because of our differing perspectives. I'm a "Xennial" (just 40). I have kids, but would have been happy with or without, as odd as that sounds. But I have several intentionally childless friends and none of my 5 siblings (all younger) have children.
It seems to be much more widely accepted among my generation and younger, which is a wonderful direction IMO. I wonder if this is mainly occurring within the younger generations in the US, or if this is now common in France and elsewhere.

I think it’s much more accepted here, generally. But I suspect there are big gaps between urban and rural folks. I live in an area where it’s non-controversial.

Books mentioned in this topic
Borders Witch Hunt (other topics)Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men (other topics)
Orbital (other topics)
Witchcraft: A History in Thirteen Trials (other topics)
Reinventing Love: How the Patriarchy Sabotages Heterosexual Relations (other topics)
More...
Authors mentioned in this topic
Mary W. Craig (other topics)Gloria Steinem (other topics)
Marion Gibson (other topics)
Mona Chollet (other topics)
Sophie R. Lewis (other topics)
More...
Chollet was the chief editor of Le Monde diplomatique from 2007 to 2022. Here's a link to a 2022 interview of Chollet about this book. https://www.bookforum.com/interviews/...
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