Niewidzialne kobiety

Jak dane tworzą świat skrojony pod mężczyzn

Paperback, 480 pages

Polish language

Published Aug. 12, 2020 by Karakter.

ISBN:
978-83-66147-36-2
Copied ISBN!
ASIN:
8366147363
(57 reviews)

Pierwsza książka, która na taką skalę analizuje seksistowski charakter świata, w którym żyjemy – od dostępności usług publicznych po projektowanie dóbr luksusowych. Caroline Criado Perez na setkach przykładów pokazuje, że domyślnym użytkownikiem większości dóbr i usług jest wciąż mężczyzna i pisze o tym, w jaki sposób wpływa to na codzienne życie połowy ludzkości. Brak istniejących danych na temat kobiet – ich potrzeb, zdrowia, sposobów korzystania z infrastruktury i usług publicznych, funkcjonowania na rynku pracy etc. prowadzi do ich systematycznej dyskryminacji we wszystkich dziedzinach życia, od języka, poprzez system edukacji czy ochrony zdrowia (np. diagnostyka i leczenie niektórych chorób), normy obowiązujące w miejscach pracy, system ochrony pracy po system podatkowy i zarządzanie, nie mówiąc już o (nie)obecności kobiet na kartach historii. Przedsięwzięcie Caroline Criado Perez jest imponujące przede wszystkim ze względu na ilość materiału, jaki poddała analizie, i fakt, że objęła nią obszar od Norwegii po Argentynę i RPA i od …

9 editions

frustrating on the surface and in depth

On the one hand this is clear and infuriating, a wide ranging look at how male-as-default, often unquestioned or under-researched, in infrastructure, transportation, medicine, employment and care and GDP, etc, makes the world much worse for women and also for everyone. Yet the book speaks of women almost entirely as a monolithic global whole - slight mentions of hormonal or racial complications, but basically no intersectional or queer consideration. As the author is often asking for better nuanced and dis-aggregated data analysis on this single important binary, we could use a version of this book that took that conclusion to a full embrace of considered complicated no-simple-norms human society.

Absolutely enraging

Invisible Women: Data Bias in a World Designed for Men is an infuriating read. Pérez asserts that not only is there a gender data gap, but that men being considered default humans makes the world worse, for everybody. She supplies plenty of evidence to support these statements. Depressing and enraging amounts of it.

First published in 2019, it has a surprising lack of discussion on how this affects people who are trans, non-binary, or of other genders, but I still feel it’s an important book everyone should read.

In most societies, on average, females live longer than males. And it's a miracle!

This is a must-read for every person. (See what I did there?).

I was starting to read this book assuming that I won't be too shocked. Women face so much unfairness, which – after seeing it once – is impossible to unsee.

Sadly, I was wrong. The most outrageous things I learned about were:

Uniform causing bone fracture in high-performance female professionals such as law enforcement, military, rescue.

Think about it – the objects that are meant to protect women instead damage them. It is known to manufacturers and governments, but it take lawsuits to get even a sliver of movement towards fixing.

Knowing refusal to sex the data.

Governments, academia, manufacturers refuse to sex the data of stuff like car crashes (!) using lame excuses. It's obvious that the idea is – if there is no data, it's impossible to be called out on a systemic problem. The same …

Hidden World Bias

Many of us are aware of the disadvantages women face, such as the gender pay gap, tax on feminine care products etc. This book goes far deeper, exploring how data often does not include or separate male and female data, how body armour police wear and much more.

I felt this book opened my eyes more to the stark differences.

Review of 'Invisible Women' on 'Goodreads'

No rating

An important and frustrating read, this book had me frowning whenever I picked it up. Which terrible negligence would I encounter in the next chapter?
The gender data gap - the fact that we, as a society, know much less about women and their lives in nearly every aspect - is so unbelievably wide, and discouragingly unknown (or disregarded?) that it was hard to believe this book wasn't written much sooner.
Medicine and employment, taxes and public services, democracy and business - Caroline Criado Pérez shows, after years of meticulous research, just how bad the situation really is for women. The only way out? More research in the short run, and a much better representation of women in all positions of power.

Two aspects made me like this book less than I had anticipated.

- It's frustrating to read because of its content, but also because of its style. …

Review of 'Invisible Women' on 'Goodreads'

This book focuses on an important data gap, that is present in every subject of human knowledge: the point of view of women. It definitely changed my perspective and how I see the world.

Still, in my opinion "Invisible women" too has an important data gap: since it only considers male and female experiences, it completely ignores the points of view of all Trans and Intersex people, and of everyone who doesn't fit the binary. It was a bit of a disappointment seeing the author missing her own point and excluding the often ignored but very interesting experiences of queer people just because she has not lived through the same discrimination as them.

avatar for tgt

rated it

avatar for thisisfranklin

rated it

avatar for moohan

rated it

avatar for jnyrose

rated it

avatar for ianmart1n

rated it

avatar for katinalynn

rated it

avatar for hark

rated it

avatar for tempse

rated it

avatar for MayaAngel82

rated it

avatar for philphorward

rated it

avatar for deniedbydaniela

rated it

avatar for hughrawlinson

rated it

avatar for JoeGermuska

rated it

avatar for wisdomchicken

rated it

avatar for michele.aiello

rated it

avatar for wiebkehere

rated it

avatar for pwc

rated it

avatar for alexcurtin

rated it

avatar for stinkingpig

rated it

avatar for Alexander

rated it

avatar for wordeater

rated it

avatar for gedankenstuecke

rated it

avatar for treyhunner

rated it

avatar for LaDragonista

rated it

avatar for aaronhktan

rated it

avatar for moohan

rated it

avatar for furkell

rated it

avatar for woollypigs

rated it

avatar for bewal416

rated it

avatar for SeanMcTex

rated it

avatar for schellenberg

rated it

avatar for linse

rated it

avatar for yasharz

rated it

avatar for abbybutinspace

rated it

avatar for kilian

rated it

avatar for bookit

rated it

avatar for joergr

rated it

avatar for magimagdalene

rated it

avatar for sascha

rated it

avatar for alfredEneuman

rated it

avatar for kerryn

rated it

avatar for kaleb

rated it

avatar for tamcymru

rated it

avatar for KnittedMushroom

rated it

avatar for gabuwu

rated it

avatar for MrRaccoon13

rated it

avatar for ccamara

rated it