Encuentra todas las respuestas a tu malestar como mujerSalud mental femenina con perspectiva: entiende, cuestiona y libérate.Andrea Rueda, creadora de De Dolores y Gloria y psicóloga especializada en mujeres, ofrece una vision de la salud mental femenina en la que el contexto es vital para entender nuestro malestar.Partiendo de lo que es el feminismo, propone que revisemos todas aquellas creencias que nos han enseñado, y que hemos aprendido, y que son el origen de muchos de los males que compartimos las mujeres.No estas sola en este proceso, somos todas y aqui te explicamos todo.Otras autoras han dicho:Oprimidas es una conversacion directa, intima y cercana con su autora. Una lectura que interpela, valiente y critica, a veces dura, pero siempre reveladora y llena de sororidad. Tras leerla, algo cambia inevitablemente en la manera de mirarnos y de relacionarnos. Susana Carmona, autora de Neuromaternal Andrea Rueda Granero ha escrito un libro brillante y necesario. Con valentia, lucidez y compromiso, logra devolver el malestar de las mujeres al lugar que le corresponde: al de una estructura politica, cultural y social que nos oprime. Maria Fornet, autora de Feminismo Terapeutico
According to an old joke, everyone knows that men and women are different except social scientists. In A Billion Years of Sex Differences, evolutionary psychologist Steve Stewart-Williams tackles some of sciences most controversial questions: How do men and women differ? Where do the differences come from? And how do they shape modern life?The result is the most up-to-date, balanced, and engaging account of human sex differences yet written, covering everything from dating and mating to aggression and parenting, from childrens toy preferences and workplace gender gaps to mental health and the politics of equality. Drawing on a century of research - and a billion years of evolution - Stewart-Williams explains why many sex differences appear despite socialization, not because of it; why in our mating and parenting patterns, humans are more like the average bird than the average mammal; and why sex differences are sometimes a sign of societal health rather than injustice.With more than two decades of research in evolutionary psychology and an international reputation in the field, Steve Stewart-Williams is uniquely positioned to challenge prevailing views in this fraught debate. Avoiding the extremes of either overstating or denying the differences, he argues that, rather than trying to make men and women identical, we should strive for a world where bias and barriers are eliminated, and where people are free to be themselves whether they conform to gender norms or defy them.