A provocative look at the way our culture deals with menstruation.
The Curse examines the culture of concealment that surrounds menstruation and the devastating impact such secrecy has on women's physical and psychological health. Karen Houppert combines reporting on the potential safety problems of sanitary products--such as dioxin-laced tampons--with an analysis of the way ads, movies, young-adult novels, and women's magazines foster a menstrual etiquette that leaves women more likely to tell their male colleagues about an affair than brazenly carry an unopened tampon down the hall to the bathroom. From the very beginning, industry-generated instructional films sketch out the parameters of acceptable behavior and teach young girls that bleeding is naughty, irrepressible evidence of sexuality. In the process, confident girls learn to be self-conscious teens.
And the secrecy has even broader implications. Houppert argues that industry ad campaigns have effectively stymied consumer debate, research, and safety monitoring of the sanitary-protection industry. By telling girls and women how to think and talk about menstruation, the mostly male-dominated media have set a tone that shapes women's experiences for them, defining what they are allowed to feel about their periods, their bodies, and their sexuality.
Karen Houppertis a freelance journalist who writes on a variety of feminist topics. She lives in New York City.
Karen Houppert's fierce and witty examination of menstruation shows how the natural workings of women's bodies--from our periods to our sexuality--are medicalized, sanitized, taken from us and sold back at a profit. Peggy Orenstein, author of Schoolgirls: Young Women, Self-Esteem, and the Confidence Gap
Provocative journalism . . . on a subject that impacts all girls and women, plus their teachers and physicians. Kirkus Reviews
Any women reading Houppert's book will bristle with anger atl³‡