Picture of author.

Jacky Fleming

Author of The Trouble With Women

9+ Works 330 Members 19 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Image credit: Photo courtesy of the author

Works by Jacky Fleming

The Trouble With Women (2016) 205 copies, 19 reviews
Be a Bloody Train Driver! (1991) 33 copies
Never Give Up (1992) 24 copies
Falling in Love (1993) 24 copies
Demented (2004) 17 copies
Hello Boys (1996) 16 copies
Dear Katie (1994) 9 copies
The Freedom Programme: Home Study Course (2010) — Illustrator — 1 copy

Associated Works

Women Draw 1984 (1984) — Contributor — 12 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1955
Gender
female
Awards and honors
Prix Artemisia Humour
Agent
Robert Kirby
Birthplace
London, England, UK
Associated Place (for map)
England, UK

Members

Reviews

22 reviews
The trouble with women is that our brains are so feeble and unable to comprehend complicated thoughts that the fact that this graphic novel is very pointed satire would be lost on us.

Fleming tongue-in-cheek points out the ridiculousness of believing women to be inferior to men intellectually, emotionally, physically, using historical examples. I laughed a number of times -- I laughed, so I wouldn't cry. The art is fantastic. The humor is biting. The commentary spot-on. Also, the "domestic show more sphere" may be the best play on words I've ever seen.

The trouble for women is that there are men who still think this way.

Review copy courtesy of the publisher via NetGalley.
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½
I love my history with a snide of snark. And does author Jacky Fleming ever deliver in The Trouble With Women. In this season of unbridled misogyny on display on the campaign trail, Fleming’s book provides the perfect antidote.

This book, illustrated with winsome cartoons, recounts how “genius” after “genius” — Charles Darwin, Sigmund Freud, philosopher Jean-Jacques Rousseau, philosopher Arthur Schopenhauer, philosopher Immanuel Kant, critic John Ruskin; Pierre de Frédy, Baron show more de Coubertin, the founder of the modern Olympics, and so many more — employed pretty much the same circular logic to defend keeping women down:



Fleming turns this all on its head with her cartoons and her insightful, satiric prose: “Schopenhauer said only men had the total objectivity necessary for genius, and that you only had to look at a woman’s shape to see that she wasn’t intended for much mental or physical work” (illustrated with a cartoon of the great genius philosopher pontificating while a woman carries an overflowing, capacious coal bucket by him.) Or “When African slave Phillis Wheatley wrote poetry, 18 men came to assess whether that was possible.”

But with The Trouble With Women, seeing Fleming’s work is believing:

A hilarious, if bittersweet, look at hundreds of years of rationalizing the subjugation of women. Highly, highly, highly recommended. And a special shout-out to Alienor, who introduced me to this fantastic book!
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Well this was interesting. It's a look at different (male) "geniuses" from history and the things that they've said regarding women. It's an illustrated depiction of some of these observations, in all their ridiculous glory. (Did they not hear themselves? Did they know what they were saying?) It's a nod to accomplished women who have somehow not made it into the history books. It's a reminder of how difficult things have been for women—for all women, but especially women of color.

The show more illustrations are amazing, and Fleming approaches the subject with the perfect amount of snark. Laugh-out-loud funny in some places, and very moving in others. Be prepared to roll your eyes in a couple spots. 4.5 stars, rounded up because of the humor. show less
This is a wonderful little book that addresses the issue of why women have been left out of the history books. Focusing mainly on science, maths and art, Fleming details why women were just not good enough to stand alongside the great men of history. With a wonderful use of sarcasm and some on point witticism, she has rescued a few important women from the 'Dustbin of History' and shed light on the hardships women faced and the sneaky ways they found to get round such hardships. I absolutely show more loved how very done all the women looked in the illustrations, especially when those 'great' men were prattling on about women not being smart enough. It was also wonderful to see important historical women of colour rescued from the Dustbin of History, as they are even more likely to be not taught about at school.
Overall I thoroughly enjoyed this read and will be shoving it in all my friends' hands.
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Statistics

Works
9
Also by
2
Members
330
Popularity
#71,936
Rating
4.2
Reviews
19
ISBNs
22
Languages
6
Favorited
1

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