Submitted by Purplefootprint t3_zy9kyb in books
As part of a book club, I'm reading Women Who Run With Wolves. It was part of the prompt to read something about woman-power but I find this particular book really problematic. For context, I speak Hungarian and Spanish fluently, speak English (as second language) and also dab into German. I grew up with Hungarian folk tales and Latin American folk tales. Also, in case it matters, I'm a cisgender woman.
From the get go, I find this book as a frame for self aggrandizing from the author, and strange mixes of messages where on one side is all "I raised myself entirely by learning directly from nature" and "the matrilinear chain and tradition is so important". The view of "woman" in this book seems quite constricted to mother-women, with strong emphasis on "women being nurturing and loyal". And then the message of women having this tremendous power that's feared by men, often also talking about pulling the power or the magic from the ovaries.
On top of all of this, there's a taking of folk tales and churning meaning from it, that not necessarily is what she claims to be.
So this is my issue: I believe all people are equal, men and women have skills, capacities and "magic" in them and neither is greater or better than the other. Also, trans people and cis people are all people and none is greater or better than the other. So, there the book, with its pulling towards the cis gender woman and creating an us-vs-them scenario, where only the woman seems worthy, powerful, feared and mistreated is problematic. Messages like "when a woman becomes a Wild Woman nobody can hurt her" or something to that effect sounds problematic to me.
So, is there something in this book that I'm missing? Am I misreading something? Is there a context I need to check first to understand it better?
Trick-Two497 t1_j26fpus wrote
Just to address the part about trans people, let's remember that this was written over 30 years ago. It was a much different world back then, and it's a bit unfair to judge her for not being politically correct in terms of the way we understand gender today. I think it would be fair to say that this part is outdated and therefore problematic in today's culture.
Also, not sure of your age, but please remember that attitudes towards women and equality were also quite different 30 years ago. Perhaps this book served a purpose that was important then, but again, is now outdated?