Gender Rebels

50 Influential Cross-Dressers, Impersonators, Name-Changers, and Game-Changers

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Pub Date 1 Jun 2020 | Archive Date 15 Jun 2020

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Description

Meet the unsung sheroes of history: the diverse, defiant and daring (wo)men who changed the rules, and their identities, to get sh*t done.

You’ll encounter Kit Cavanagh, the swaggering Irish dragoon who was the first woman to be buried in London with full military honours; marauding eighteenth-century pirates Mary Read and Anne Bonny, who collided on the high seas after swapping their petticoats for pantaloons; Ellen Craft, an escaped slave who masqueraded as a white master to spirit her husband-to-be to freedom; and Billy Tipton, the swinging jazz musician, who led a double life as an adult, taking five wives along the way. Then there are the women who still have to dress like men to live their best lives, like the inspirational football-lovers in Iran, who risk everything to take their place in the stands.

A call to action for the modern world, this book celebrates the #GenderRebels who paved the way for women everywhere to be soldiers and spies; kings and queens; firefighters, doctors, pilots; and a Swiss Army knife’s-worth more. These superbly spirited (wo)men all had one thing in common: they defied the rules to progress in a man’s world.

Meet the unsung sheroes of history: the diverse, defiant and daring (wo)men who changed the rules, and their identities, to get sh*t done.

You’ll encounter Kit Cavanagh, the swaggering Irish dragoon...


A Note From the Publisher

Anneka Harry hates bios because 1) it’s awkweird talking about yourself in the third person, and 2) pinning down a job title for herself is like exiting a swimming pool without a wedgie (impossible). She wants to do it ALL.

If Anneka was pushed to describe herself in a nutshell she would say she’s a ‘Comedy Hustler (Performer, Producer, Writer, Etc.)’. The ‘etc.’ leaves it open so that she can pursue whatever she decides to do tomorrow. Her writer/performer work consists of series, episodes and features for the BBC, Channel 4, ITV2, Radio 4, MTV and various online platforms including Stylist and Grazia magazines.

When Anneka isn’t parading around waving rainbow flags or trying to win feminism, she likes to be a thoroughly decent human being, drink alcohol (all types) and obsess over her sausage dog. The amount of work there is to do in the fight for equality gives Anneka regular stress migraines. She hopes this book (her first) will at least momentarily soothe anyone feeling equally overwhelmed.

Anneka Harry hates bios because 1) it’s awkweird talking about yourself in the third person, and 2) pinning down a job title for herself is like exiting a swimming pool without a wedgie (impossible)...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781542044691
PRICE US$14.95 (USD)

Average rating from 10 members


Featured Reviews

This book was not for me - a fact I realized by the third essay... The subject matter was fascinating - the lives of the women detailed inside are worthy of scholarship and publicizing, but this book feels like it was written by a middle-aged high school guidance counselor desperately trying to connect with teenagers... Injecting a little levity into serious subject matter is fine. It can help introduce difficult or sensitive topics and keep the weight of difficult stories from becoming overwhelming. But turning everyone's name into a pithy nickname, sprinkling in crude references to men and male body parts, and taking every opportunity to incorporate text - worthy deliberate misspellings and dated pop culture references in an attempt to look trendy made this one a no - go for me... I was looking for tales of women who made difficult, brave choices because of the circumstances of their lives. What I got instead felt like a comedian opening a women's studies conference... It wasn't a style that worked for me.

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Let me start off by saying, I was so excited to read this book. It came after me reading about women in the Crimean War so I was ready and willing to devour this book... unfortunately, it fell flat. Very flat.

The concept was great, I really wanted to read about women who threw down the gauntlet and tore apart stereotypes but none of the fifty women in the book had any justice done to them because of Harry's writing! She writes like a journalist from Bliss magazine. I would have more faith in this book if if had of been written about One Direction!

When I first got this book I did note the low reviews - I was puzzled. What could she have possibly written about that would have gotten these bad ratings? Then I read some of them and they all say the same thing... her writing is flippant, immature and patronising.

As I stated above, none of the strong and inspiring women in the book got the justice they deserved due to the stupid comments every second sentence. I can see that Harry didn't want to write a really heavy history book and probably wanted to appeal to the "Insta-peeps" of today with her writing but lord, was it bad. There was literally no happy medium.

I give this book 2.5 stars out of 5 for the concept and I enjoyed reading about the lives of these women, I'll probably do my own research on them based on the bibliography provided at the end because I learned zilch; nada from this book.

Recieved an ARC from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.

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Lots of us might know the names of Mulan or Mary Read who disguised themselves as men during their lives to become a soldier and a pirate respectively, or even more likely given our favourite topic (books) you’ve probably heard of authors like George Eliot, women who used men’s names to publish their books and have their voices heard, but I for one had never heard the names of so many #genderrebels before opening up Anneka Harry’s book for the first time. This book is full of women who were denied the lives they wanted based on the perception of their gender and turned around and said we’re going to have it anyway!

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This books is about the unsung female (s)heroes of history. It talks about 50 (wo)men that did some spectacular things and makes you want to read more about them. It looks at how empowered they felt and actually even though they were born females it doesn't mean that they saw themselves that way.

I really didn't know what to think of this book. I loved the concept of this book but I felt that the execution just didn't do it justice. Again the concept of our unsung women is great especially when its looking at how they were perceived but again the execution wasn't for me.

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I couldn't even finish this because of the utterly poor writing. Not everything needs a bad joke to try and be relevant. This could have been done well. Unfortunately it wasn't.

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I was really excited to find out about this book as a gay man! However, within the first few pages I found the storytelling to be very try hard and cringeworthy. I felt like it was trying to appeal to a younger audience. Even as a 25 year old who has grown up in London and is familiar with a lot of the slang and buzzwords used in queer and pop cultures, the way the author used the language did not feel genuine and it put me off of the book completely. It's such a shame as the stories of the women in the book are very inspirational.

Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for providing an eARC in exchange for an honest review.

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DNF @10%

The authorial voice in this book is just not working for me at all and the humor is not landing. In addition, from the title and synopsis, I was expecting the stories to reflect a variety of genders rebelling from the standards put upon them, but these seem to be all stories about women. Not necessarily a problem, but not what I was hoping for.

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This is a fantastic concept, but I don't think the author managed to frame it in the right way. I wish they had been more removed from the narrative because it really is their tone and commentary that taints an otherwise perfect premise. I don't think their humor hit the mark and actually came across as condescending in some places.

The language used is odd and comes across as trying too hard to appeal to a younger audience - which is never a good thing! Younger readers can spot this a mile off. It just ends up sounding forced and unnatural. I don't think it will help the text stay relevant either, and it will likely date it.

I wish this could have been redone with a lighter touch because it really is a fantastic idea.

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