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Publicity History:
Radio Satellite Tour:
20-city: 8/24 (Barnett)
20-city: 8/25 (Rivers)
8/24 7:05 am USA Radio Network - national, 10 min live w/Daybreak USA, nationally syndicated
8/24 7:20 am KTRS-AM/St. Louis MO, 10 min live w/Morning Show, top-rated AM
8/24 7:35 am KYW-AM/Philadelphia PA, 5 min live w/Morning News, 50,000 watt AM
8/24 8:15 am WARE-AM/Springfield MA, 10 min live w/Fred King, mid-sized AM
8/24 8:45 am ABC Radio Network - national, 15 min live w/Jonathan & Mary, nationally syndicate
8/24 10:05 am Business Talk Radio - national, 10 min live w/Business Talk, nationally syndicated
8/24 10:30 am KVON-AM/San Francisco CA, 30 min taped w/Morning Edition, mid-sized AM
8/24 11:00 am WLW-AM/Cincinnati OH, 30 min live w/Mike McConnell, 50,000 watt AM
8/24 11:30 am KLIK-AM/St. Louis MO, 10 min taped w/Daybreak, mid-sized AM
8/24 11:40 am KMJE-FM/Sacramento CA, 10 min taped w/Morning Show, mid-sized FM
8/24 12:00 pm WBAA-AM/Indiana Public Radio, 15 min live w/AM 920 Magazine, NPR affiliated
8/24 12:30 pm WTMD-FM/Baltimore MD, 30 min taped w/Clear Reception, NPR affiliated
8/24 3:00 pm Gary Null Show - national, 20 min live w/Gary Null, nationally syndicated
8/24 6:30 pm KMSR-AM/Dallas TX, 30 min live w/David Gold, 50,000 watt AM
8/25 7:20 am WRQX-FM/Washington DC, 10 min live w/Jack Diamond, top-rated FM
8/25 7:37 am WSAR-AM/Providence RI-SE MA, 8 min live w/Morning Show, mid-sized AM
8/25 8:10 am Cable Radio Network - national, 10 min live w/Cable Talk, nationally syndicated
8/25 9:30 am WFMP-FM/Minneapolis MN, 10 min live w/Ian Punnett, 100,000 watt FM
8/25 9:45 am WIOD-AM/Miami FL, 10 min taped w/Morning News, top-rated AM
8/25 10:05 am Accent Radio Network - national, 25min live w/Right Balance, nationally syndicated
8/25 10:30 am *Business Talk Radio - national, 15 min taped w/MG & Stock Dr, nationally syndicated
8/25 10:45 am WJR-AM/Detroit MI, 15 min taped w/Warren Pierce, 50,000 watt AM
8/25 11:15 am Talk One Radio - national, 30 min taped w/Danna Day, nationally syndicated
8/25 12:05 pm Jefferson Public Radio-regional CA/OR, 50 min live w/Jefferson Exchange, regional simulcast
8/25 4:30 pm KAHI-AM/Sacramento CA, 30 min live w/Popp Off, mid-sized AM
8/31 2:00 pm KMTT-FM/Seattle WA, 15 min taped w/Mountain Magazine, 100,000 watt FM
9/1 2:00 pm *WXRK-FM/New York NY, 30 min taped w/Bob Salter, 50,000 watt FM
9/12 7:00 am WIP-AM/Philadelphia PA, 60 min live w/Conversations, 50,000 watt AM
9/12, 7 a.m. "Boston Sunday Review" with Matt, WBCN
9/14 9:30 am` *WZLX-FM/Boston MA, 30 min taped w/Common Ground, 50,000 watt FM
9/15 10:00 am *Voice of America - national, 20 min taped w/Coast to Coast, nationally syndicated
National Radio:
8/4, live Talk of the Nation , NPR, interview, (Rivers)
8/16 Conversations with Joy Cardin, Wisconsin Public Radio
8/16 Positive Parenting, Washington, DC & San Francisco
8/20 On Point, WBUR NPR, live interview, (Barnett & Rivers)
Local Radio:
8/11, live: Brian Lehrer, WNYC-FM
9/12, live: Boston Sunday Review, WBCN-AM, Boston
TV:
8/30, 7 p.m. (Barnett) "Nightbeat with Barry Nolan" Comcast Cable TV
8/24: Greater Boston, WGBH-TV Boston
National Print:
6/15 Library Journal review
7/11 The Gazette, Montreal
7/23 Chronicle of Higher Education, article by Barnett & Rivers
July/August issue : Psychology Today (review)
August issure of Child Magazine, feature article
9/3: Chronicle of Higher Education (article by Barnett and Rivers debunking studies that set apart men and women)
10/2: Associated Press (included in article about on same-sex education)
10/3: Education Week (essay by authors)
10/24: New York Times Book Review (review)
Fall '04: Bust Magazine (review)
Nov. issue: Family & Work Institute Newsletter (feature; goes to HR managers)
Local Print:
7/7 New York Daily News, featured in editorial
7/17 Miami Herald
8/2 Minneapolis Star-Tribune
9/2 Nashville Scene
9/6 Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
9/12: Boston Globe (review)
10/10: Boston Globe (included in round-up in "Balancing Acts")
11/26: Boston Globe (included in 2004 holiday book gift list)
Internet:
08/04 Women's Enews
9/1: WomensEnews (op-ed)
Sept.: Bookviews.com (review)
Events:
9/23: American Business Collaboration (Rosalind spoke about women and leadership to 100 representatives of 45 companies like IBM)
9/30: Family and Work Institute Teleconference with Fortune 1000 companies about leadership
10/19: Barnes & Noble (Boston University)
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by Rosalind Barnett and Caryl Rivers
**Please note that Rosalind Barnett and/or Caryl Rivers are available for speaking engagements to PTA/PTOs, school staff and parents of preschool, early, middle, and high school children, and college staff and students as well as business groups, individual corporations, unions, and mental health practitioners . Please click on Rosalind Barnett's name above for contact information.
Recent Presentations:
Universities:
- Auburn University
- Brandeis University
- Boston University
- Amherst, Smith, Mt.Holyoke, Hampshire, U Mass. Amherst
- University of British Columbia
Private Elementary Schools:
- Lowell School, Washington, D.C.
Buisness Groups:
- American Business Collaboiratinve
- Families and Work Instititue Leadeship Circle
- Smith College Education for Executive Women
General Audiences:
- Newton Free Library
- Paperback Booksmith
- Newtonville Book Store
Mental Health Professionals
- Massachusetts School of Professional Psychology
- American Psychological Association annual meeting, 2004
Book Description:
A landmark demonstration of how groundless beliefs about "natural" differences between the sexes have harmed both women and men-with a hopeful vision based on up-to-the-minute research.
From respected academics like Carol Gilligan to pop-psych gurus like John Gray, the message has long been the same: Men and women are fundamentally different, and trying to bridge the gender gap can only lead to grief. Generations have bought into the idea that women are uniquely primed to be "relational," men innately driven toward achievement-even when these "truths" are contradicted by what's happening in our daily lives.
The time has come, argue the authors of this groundbreaking book, to liberate ourselves from biological determinism. Drawing on years of exhaustive research, Barnett and Rivers reveal how a toxic mix of junk science, pop psychology, and media hype has profoundly influenced our thinking and behavior, causing us to make poor decisions about how we choose our mates, raise our children, and manage our careers.
It is power, not gender, that makes a difference; in fact, there are more differences among women (or men) with varying degrees of power than there are between women and men. In this vitally important and life-changing book, Barnett and Rivers sound a clarion call: a plea to end sexual stereotyping so that women and men, girls and boys, may realize their destinies as full human beings.
Same Difference takes on the myths of "Mars and Venus":
Myth...Men are genetically driven to seek out beautiful women. This may have been true in the stone age, but times change. Now, a significant number of men report that an attractive portfolio is even more alluring than a pretty face.
Myth...Women want to marry wealthy men who can protect them and their children. In fact, a surprising majority of today's women put a higher price tag on empathy and nurturance.
Myth...Girls face an inevitable plunge in self-esteem at adolescence. Recent research finds no evidence of this. Yet parents, teachers, and girls themselves lower their expectations and balk at challenges, because of this pervasive belief.
Myth...Boys and girls learn differently. Teaching styles that emphasize different tactics for boys and girls are more often rooted in stereotypes than research or hard science, and can lead to a poorer-quality education for girls. Still, public funds are squandered on special curricula aimed at "female learning styles."
Myth...Men and women speak "different languages"-they "Just Don't Understand" each other. Wrong. Women talk "male" in the boardroom, and men easily master "motherese."
Myth...Female leadership is kinder and gentler. Not so. Position is the key to behavior: female managers are not more democratic than males, though many of us might like to think so.
Early Praise:
"In a universe that puts men on Mars and women on Venus, Caryl Rivers and Rosalind Barnettt are wonderfully down to Earth. What a refreshing and savvy debunking of all the myths about gender." --Ellen Goodmman, Boston Globe. Author of Paper Trail: Commons Sense in Uncommon Times
"My congratulations to Barnett and Rivers for another first-class job of exploring the gender myths affecting our society. They take no prisoners, nor should they, in their cutting analysis, based on solid research and totally accessible writing." --Marvin Kalb, senior fellow of Shorenstein Center on Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University
"In 'Same-Difference' Barnett and Rivers present the view that females and males are both similar and different, but it is how we explain similarities and differences and the importance that we place on the ways in which we are the same or different that creates our understanding about what is "natural" for each sex. Instead of pitting nature against nurture, they present a more optimistic and accurate picture of human functioning that shows how people develop interests, talents, and abilities in a cultural and historical context that allows everyone a fuller range of "natural" life options that include nurturing fathers and women as political leaders." --Diane F. Halpern, former President of the American Psychological Association, Professor of Psychology, Claremont McKenna College, and Director of the Berger Institute for Work, Family, and Children
"The message SAME DIFFERENCE is compelling: For too long, society has stuffed men and women into ill-fitting stereotypes, and now the tight garments are pinching. This engaging book's illuminating look at the scientific evidence is liberating in the best and healthiest sense-that is, freeing individuals to be themselves." --Rosabeth Moss Kanter, Harvard Business School, author of Confidence: How Winning Streaks and Losing Streaks Begin and End
"A wonderfully provocative book that challenges, one by one, the most popular myths of gender difference, using a combination of compelling science and wise insight. Because it is easier to 'sell' the notion that a wide gulf exists between men and women, books and articles proclaiming gender differences receive cover story attention. I strongly hope that this book receives comparable attention and is widely read because it will clearly help improve relationships between men and women, boys and girls." --Ellen Galinsky, President, Families and Work Institute; author, Ask the Children
"The result is a benchmark work highly recommended for all academic libraries and for large public libraries with good psychology collections." --Library Journal (6/15/04),
"Stereotypes about the differences between women and men may be based on flimsy evidence, but taking them seriously can do real damage to our relationships and careers. Both men and women pay a steep price. Blending case histories, new research and thoughtful analysis, the writers describe the divide between the sexes as a crevice, not a chasm. The good news: We're all a lot more flexible than the gender cliches let on." --Psychology Today (July/August issue)
"SAME DIFFERENCE, then, serves a practical purpose of helping families reconcile their non-traditional balance between work and home against long-held beliefs, including that men are prehistorically predisposed to be providers and that women lack the hard wiring to do math. . . it is a provocative examination of embedded stereotypes that the authors contend limit the potential of both men and women." --Milwaukee Journal Sentinel (9/6/04)
"This book would be handy to have around as ammunition against the casual sexist remarks that tend to find voice at office parties, holiday dinners and wherever else humans gather." --Nashville Scene (9/2/04)
"[The authors'] arguments are sensible and persuasive..." -- Boston Globe (9/12/04)
"This book is worth reading for what it says about our society and the gender issues it is confronting." --Bookviews.com (Sept., 2004)
"In their important new book, Brandeis University senior scientist Rosalind Barnett and Boston University journalism professor Caryl Rivers debunk entrenched and erroneous gender myths that influence the way we work and live, such as the idea women have a near-monopoly on caring. "Same Difference: How Gender Myths are Hurting Our Relationships, Our Children and Our Jobs," will help us lead fuller lives." --Boston Globe (10/10/04)
"The authors debunk these theories in a no-nonsense way, offering a refreshingly direct (i.e. unashamedly judgemental) critique of traditional parental roles, tututting at the couples they interviewed who cling to stereotyped ideas of the family." --New York Times Book Review (10/24/04)
"So, in the name of freedom, I encourge you to sit that insensitive, workaholic boyfriend of your yours down in front of a football game and take your maternal, co-dependent self to the bookstore to pick up this fabulous gem." --Bust Magazine (Fall '04)
"SAME DIFFERENCE is a kick in the solar plexus of conventional wisdom on how men and women think. . . The book is a lesson in critical thinking and a warning to look more deeply into data before believing the latest hot story about the battle of the sexes." --Boston Globe (11/26/04)
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