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Girls and Philosophy: This Book Isn't a Metaphor for Anything
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Girls and Philosophy: This Book Isn't a Metaphor for Anything
Current price: $19.95
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Barnes and Noble
Girls and Philosophy: This Book Isn't a Metaphor for Anything
Current price: $19.95
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Size: Paperback
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The drama-comedy
Girls
often unfairly written off as
Sex and the City
for the millennial generation has made TV history and provoked controversy for its pitilessly accurate portrayal of four oddly sympathetic twentysomething female characters, notable for their self-absorption, empathy deficits, and ineptitude with relationships. Among other breakthroughs, it is the first show to depict the sex act among the alienated young as nearly always awkward and unfulfilling. In
Girls and Philosophy
, a team of diverse, sensitive, empathic philosophers approach the world of
from a variety of angles and philosophical points of view. The writers attack many fascinating issues arising from
, including the meaning of authenticity in the 21st century, coming of age in a society with no clear guidelines,
as the only TV show the pop-culture-hating professor Theodor Adorno might have admired, feminist appraisals of these not-very-feminist characters, how each deals with the anxiety that comes from inescapable freedom, whether we need to amend the traditional list of seven deadly sins in the context of present-day New York, and, of course, why we once again find it natural to think of women in their early- to mid-twenties as girls.”
Girls
often unfairly written off as
Sex and the City
for the millennial generation has made TV history and provoked controversy for its pitilessly accurate portrayal of four oddly sympathetic twentysomething female characters, notable for their self-absorption, empathy deficits, and ineptitude with relationships. Among other breakthroughs, it is the first show to depict the sex act among the alienated young as nearly always awkward and unfulfilling. In
Girls and Philosophy
, a team of diverse, sensitive, empathic philosophers approach the world of
from a variety of angles and philosophical points of view. The writers attack many fascinating issues arising from
, including the meaning of authenticity in the 21st century, coming of age in a society with no clear guidelines,
as the only TV show the pop-culture-hating professor Theodor Adorno might have admired, feminist appraisals of these not-very-feminist characters, how each deals with the anxiety that comes from inescapable freedom, whether we need to amend the traditional list of seven deadly sins in the context of present-day New York, and, of course, why we once again find it natural to think of women in their early- to mid-twenties as girls.”