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Rebel Girl
Rebel Girl: My Life As a Feminist Punk | Kathleen Hanna
8 posts | 5 read | 1 reading | 5 to read
A no-holds-barred memoir from the American singer, artist, and feminist icon Kathleen Hanna. Pioneer of the feminist punk riot grrrl movement, Hanna was the lead singer in BIKINI KILL and Le Tigre. She is now the front woman of Julie Ruin and is married to Adam Horovitz from the Beastie Boys.
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Luke-XVX
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Time to start this.

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ImperfectCJ
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This was a little tough to read/listen to at first because it brought back so many feelings of powerlessness and shame from my adolescence in the 1990s, but ultimately I loved hearing Hanna's story of moving through trauma and finding joy in midlife (spoiler alert?). It makes me want to take creative risks. Also, her time in Durham, NC, overlapped with mine...I wonder if we ever crossed paths without my knowing it? (probably not)

ImperfectCJ And thanks to @Lindy for alerting me to this book's existence! 1mo
Lindy Finding joy in midlife is a good way to describe Hanna‘s current situation. (Not a spoiler.) 1mo
54 likes2 stack adds2 comments
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Lindy
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A gripping, eye-opening memoir by feminist punk singer-songwriter Kathleen Hanna. She says: “Male violence didn‘t create me, it just made it harder to make my art, but I did it anyway.” And did she ever have to face a lot of male violence! I didn‘t listen to Bikini Kill or Le Tigre, but when Hanna talks about her musical influences like Joan Jett and Yaz, that brought me back to my youth. Audiobook performed by the author.

ImperfectCJ I just watched the documentary about Hanna from a few years ago. It's so full of how angry we all felt in the 90s (or at least how angry I felt, and apparently Kathleen Hanna, too, only she channeled it a lot more effectively). I stacked this and got the audiobook from Libby immediately after reading your review! 2mo
Lindy @ImperfectCJ The documentary sounds good! I hope you enjoy Hanna‘s memoir. 2mo
34 likes1 stack add2 comments
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Lindy
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We were in our early 20s and still called each other girl. We were reading Carol Gilligan‘s book about how at age 11 some girls experience a moment of resistance in which they are brave and confident, but by the time they are 16 they are saying “I don‘t know” all the time. Selfishly, I just wanted to relive my own childhood, and win this time, which is why I started wearing Girl Scout uniforms with combat boots.

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Lindy
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Maybe the struggle for language was the moment we were trapped in. Why were we always expected to answer ignorant questions with thoughtful articulate answers? Why were we always explaining ourselves? Maybe that was what third wave girls were about: speaking back to power with sounds that didn‘t always make sense.

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BookishTrish
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Exactly as described. I appreciate Hanna‘s candour, emotional intelligence, and critical self reflection. What a wild life!

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pdxannie
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I love a less than 24-hour read. B you should read it 🤪. Ps why are the filters on this app so much better than IG

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PunkRockLibrarian

The trauma and truth this woman tells is intense. As a feminist punk librarian, I see some of my naive ideals and dangerous mistakes in what Kathleen Hanna is writing. We wanted to change the world and solve it all at 20 something.