This is the title the TLS has given to my review of the new books by Alison Wolf and Sheryl Sandberg. The review is here and you can download a pdf here.
The book is now out (Carlos Cañon, Guido Friebel and I have a chapter in it which you can download here). The book’s web page is here.
The Symposium is now live here
Emission au sujet de Sexonomics à la radio belge RBTF avec la charmante Gabrielle Stefanski. Vous pouvez la réécouter ici.
Le numéro “Plâteau de fêtes” de cette émission a cité Sexonomics et La Société des Inconnus. Vous pouvez réécouter l’émission ici, à partir d’à peu près 18 minutes 30 jusqu’à 25 minutes environ.
Quatre chroniques émises dans la semaine du 17 décembre 2012 autour des thèmes de Sexonomics.
Première chronique: “Inégalités économiques entre hommes et femmes: sommes-nous restés des primates?”
Deuxième chronique: “Comment les hommes et les femmes cultivent leurs réseaux dans les entreprises”
Dream Girl is the title of a short film by my daughter Alice Seabright that has won third prize in the Virgin Media Shorts 2012 competition.
The details, along with the 13 shortlisted films, can be seen here. All films are under 2 minutes and 20 seconds long.
We have a new website – find it here.
La Vie Rêvée d’Ernesto G, par Jean-Michel Guenassia. Published September 2012 by Albin Michel.
Very interesting second novel by the author of Le Club des Incorrigibles Optimistes. Joseph K, born in Prague in 1910, studies medicine and goes to work in Algiers for the Institut Pasteur but has to hide in the malaria-infested southern countryside when the German occupiers begin rounding up Jews. After the War he returns to Prague and becomes a convinced communist. This tale of his gradual disillusionment takes a curious turn when he has to look after a Latin American patient who turns out to be none other than Che Guevara, who begins to be charmed by Joseph’s own daughter. The prose is sometimes slow, and the the plot constructions doesn’t have the same taut architecture as the earlier novel, but it is still a fascinating encounter with some of the twentieth century’s most poignant themes – tenderness, loss and betrayal among those who are caught in the hurricane of historical events.
Picture credit: Boardroom battles….. The Apprentice. Photograph: BBC/PA Photo, from the review in The Guardian.
December 2013 update: Martin Wolf has chosen The War of the Sexes as one of his books of the year in the Financial Times:
“With characteristic brilliance, Seabright uses biology, sociology, anthropology and economics to explain the war of the sexes. Men and women must co-operate to bring their offspring to maturity and conflict is inherent. Yet today opportunities for more successful and equal relations between the sexes are greater than ever before.”
Other reviews:
In chronological order of appearance:
John Whitfield in Nature.
A favorable but somewhat surrealistically inaccurate review by Roger Lewis in the Daily Mail.
Jonathan Rée in The Guardian
Fran Hawthorne in The New York Journal of Books
Camilla Power in Times Higher Education
Alexander Delaigue in Liberation (in French)
Anna Cristina Pertierra in Inside Story
Joshi Herrmann in The London Evening Standard
Michele Pridmore-Brown in the Times Literary Supplement, available here (pdf here)
Elaine Graham-Leigh in Counterfire
Some reactions in the blogosphere:
Sander Van Der Linden in LSE Review of Books
My post at the Huffington Post blog
Interviews, other coverage:
The Financial Security Project at Boston College
BBC Nightwaves, the interview runs from the 23 minutes point and lasts 11 minutes
VoxEU interview
The Moncrieff Show on Newstalk Radio Ireland, section 4, around 9 minutes in