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Orenstein speaks on work, family, feminismPeggy Orenstein -- author of “Waiting for Daisy: A Tale of Two Continents, Three Religions, Five Infertility Doctors, An Oscar, An Atomic Bomb, A Romantic Night and One Woman’s Quest to Become a Mother” — will speak about her writing career, experience with infertility, what it is to be a “contemporary woman,” and other topics when she lectures Wednesday, Feb. 28, at Northwestern University. Not one to shy away from long titles, Orenstein’s lecture is called “My So-Called Life: Writing on Love, Ambivalence, Infertility, Cinderella and the Modern Female Experience.” Free and open to the public, it will take place at 4 p.m. in Room 107 of Harris Hall. “Waiting for Daisy,” which will appear on the New York Times’ upcoming extended best-seller list Feb. 18, documents Orenstein’s real-life battle with infertility and the painful decisions that go with it. She says she wrote the book in part because she was frustrated by “punitive media messages that reduce young women to their child-bearing potential and that warn them to “marry ‘Mr. Good Enough,’ and back-burner their careers or miss out on having a child.” The author of “Schoolgirls: Young Women, Self-Esteem and the Confidence Gap,” and “Flux: Women on Sex, Work, Love Kids and Life in a Half-Changed World,” Orenstein is former managing editor of Mother Jones. |
Freshman applications soar to all-time high
State of the University; President to deliver annual talk March 1 Northwestern among top users of green power Record number of Merit Scholars enrolled this year Program highlights Nemmers Prize winner University announces policy on Sudan divestment Students help local workers with income taxes Conference explores images, memory of slavery
Study suggests daters ‘play it cool’ Three receive Early Career Development awards Book presents anti-poverty policy model Dittmar exhibit reveals lives touched by poverty Events feature pianist Goode in his first residency Danceworks shows span pop/rap to Gypsy folk Orenstein speaks on work, family, feminism Music faculty take the stage Feb. 28, March 1 |
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