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Ask Yourself: The Consent Culture Workbook [Mīkstie vāki]

4.81/5 (32 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 16 pages, height x width: 203x133 mm, weight: 227 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Jun-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Thornapple Press
  • ISBN-10: 1778242006
  • ISBN-13: 9781778242007
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
  • Mīkstie vāki
  • Cena: 26,10 €
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  • Formāts: Paperback / softback, 16 pages, height x width: 203x133 mm, weight: 227 g
  • Izdošanas datums: 02-Jun-2023
  • Izdevniecība: Thornapple Press
  • ISBN-10: 1778242006
  • ISBN-13: 9781778242007
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
Practical exercises exploring the role of consent in confronting power structures in day-to-day life.

What does “consent culture” mean to you? Navigating the complex, never-ending work of culture change can be overwhelming at times. Whether you’re exploring what consent means in your personal life or as part of your work in the world, Ask Yourself guides you through the introspection necessary for lasting change. In Ask: Building Consent Culture, consent culture activist Kitty Stryker compiled a diverse collection of essays from people working on questions of how to build a culture of consent in our everyday world. This timely and practical companion workbook invites you to take a journey through your own thoughts on consent and consider how you can help build consent culture. Ask Yourself guides you through a structured exploration with prompts for 28 days of journaling, conversations, and other work. The prompts are split into four sections on distinct themes that allow you to explore consent at your own pace and in your own way. This thoughtful book also features short contributions from consent culture activists to help inspire reflection.

Recenzijas

This is a f*cking good book!" - Nicole Byer, actor, and host of Netflixs Nailed It

"An inquisitive guide that directs readers to turn inward to explore and interrogate their personal relationship to consent. I would recommend this workbook to anyone who's ready to dive deeper and build a stronger understanding of what it takes to build and maintain a true culture of consent." - Anne Hodder-Shipp, sex and relationships educator and author of Speaking from the Heart: 18 Languages for Modern Love

"One comes away from this book with a much deeper understanding of the nuanced and evolving idea of consent, a clearer understanding of ones own place within this landscape and, perhaps most importantly, the tools to be of service to others. This is a vital text." - Alex Winter, actor, Bill & Ted's Excellent Adventure

"This workbook invites us beyond discussions of rape culture and harm-avoidancethe thought-provoking prompts also explore the nature of how and why we say "yes" to each other on every level, exploring consent as a basis to develop a more equitable and self-acknowledging way to move through the world, and as a radical paradigm for our selves in relation to other people." - Leigh Alexander, narrative designer and writer of Reigns: Her Majesty

"Whether you're already an advocate looking to further your understanding or new to the concept of consent culture and bettering the power dynamics in your everyday life, the perspectives and tools discussed within are not just worth reading, but worth returning to many times thereafter." - Matthew Mercer, voice actor and Game Master for Dungeons & Dragons web series Critical Role

"Ask Yourself is a much-needed resource for individuals and groups to collectively think through the complex dynamics that shape how we conduct ourselves in all aspects of life." - Mark Bray, history professor and author of Antifa: The Anti-Fascist Handbook

"These conversations on consent are essential for building healthy dynamics in all of our relationships, not just sexual ones. Ask Yourself offers us a tool towards understanding our ongoing relationship with consent beyond just yes and no." - Andy Duran, education director, Good Vibrations and Babeland

"This workbook is an essential resource for building a culture that is based on mutual respect, dignity, safety, and pleasure... It's an invaluable resource for making sure we build identities, communities, and a society that is committed to making sure we do." - Soraya Chemaly, author of Rage Becomes Her: The Power of Women's Anger

"The collection will prove a useful addition to the toolkit for those who are working towards not just towards sexual equality, but equity in all areas of public life." - Sophia Kaufman, The Michigan Daily

"At a time when every conversation seems to be about consent (or lack thereof, rather), its a collection that actually adds to the discussion in crucial ways, and would prove enriching even to those who consider themselves pros at discussing sex, consent, and feminism." - Sarah Burke, Broadly

Acknowledgments
Foreword
Wagatwe Wanjuki
Glossary xvii
INTRODUCTION
1(180)
The History
Ask: Building Consent Culture
This Workbook
Week One Introspection
15(42)
Day One What Is Consent Culture?
Day Two What Do You Want to Learn?
25(6)
Day Three When Should You Take a Break From This Personal Work?
31(6)
Day Four What Are Your Boundaries?
37(10)
Day Five What Are Your Advantages and Challenges?
41
Day Six How Can You Expand Your Scope?
47(4)
Day Seven What Stories Have You Internalized?
51(6)
Week Two Our Relationship To Each Other
57(38)
Day Eight What Are Your Limits?
Day Nine What Do You Like to Offer?
65(6)
Day Ten What Do You Like to Receive?
71(4)
Day Eleven How Do You Hear" No"?
75(6)
Day Twelve How Can We Reframe "No"?
81(4)
Day Thirteen Can Consent Be Sexy?
85(6)
Day Fourteen Do You Need a Soap Box, a Tissue Box, or a Tool Box?
91(4)
Week Three Our Relationship To The Community
95(42)
Day Fifteen Who Is Your Community?
Day Sixteen Who Can You Process Boundary Crossing With?
103(6)
Day Seventeen What Do You Do When Society Is Coercive?
109(8)
Day Eighteen When Can Consent Be Complex?
117(6)
Day Nineteen How Do Communities Respond?
123(6)
Day Twenty How Can We Create a Code of Conduct?
129(4)
Day Twenty-One How Can We Improve Community Care?
133(4)
Week Four Reflection
137(44)
Day Twenty-Two How Are You Doing?
Day Twenty-Three How Can You Empower Yourself to Act in Support of Others?
145(4)
Day Twenty-Four How Can You Be Accountable?
149(6)
Day Twenty-Five What Are Some Small Steps You Can Take?
155(10)
Day Twenty-Six How Can We Pass Along What We've Learned?
165(6)
Day Twenty-Seven Can We Take a Moment for Self-Reflection?
171(4)
Day Twenty-Eight What Is Consent Culture?
175(6)
The End Is Just the Beginning
Resources
181(4)
Contributors 185
Kitty Stryker has been working on defining and creating a consent culture for over a decade. Based in Berkeley, CA, shes the editor of Ask: Building Consent Culture and author of Ask Yourself: The Consent Culture Workbook, Say More: Consent Conversations for Teens and Love Rebels: How I Learned to Burn It Down Without Burning Out. She is especially interested in bringing conversations about consent into everyday life.

Wagatwe Wanjuki is a writer, educator and digital strategist empowering survivors and helping communities improve how they prevent and respond to gender-based violence.