At a time when women are being exhorted to ‘lean in’ and work harder to get ahead,
Letting Go: Feminist and Social Justice Insight and Activism encourages both women and men to ‘let go’ instead. The book explores alternatives to the belief that individual achievement, accumulation, and attention-seeking are the road to happiness and satisfaction in life. Letting go demands a radical recognition that the values, relationships, and structures of our neoliberal (competitive, striving, accumulating, consuming, exploiting, oppressive) society are harmful both on a personal level and, especially important, on a social and environmental level.
There is a huge difference between letting go and ‘chilling out.’ In a lean-in society, self-care is promoted as something women and men should do to learn how to ‘relax’ and find a comfortable work-life balance. By contrast, a feminist letting-go and its attendant self-care have the potential to be a radical act of awakening to social and environmental injustice and a call to activism.
About the author
Catherine (Kay) G. Valentine, Professor Emerita of Sociology and founding director of women’s studies at Nazareth College, is coeditor of The Kaleidoscope of Gender: Prisms, Patterns, and Possibilities.