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Without
Apology
Girls, Women, and the Desire to Fight
by: Leah Hager Cohen
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“Any girl who boxes challenges, wittingly
or not, the idea of what it means to be a girl
in our culture. Through the prism of what she
does with her fists, she sheds a fiercely contrarian
light on our most fundamental notions about femininity
and power and appetite and shame and desire.”
Thus writes Leah Hager Cohen in Without Apology,
her singular exploration of the world of female
aggression.
In
the fall of 2001, Cohen met up with four girls,
ages ten to fifteen, and their female coach at
the Somerville Boxing Club. Over the course
of a year, she grew close to them all–spending
time at the old-style boxing club where they trained
several times a week and at their homes, schools,
and neighborhood hangouts. She learned about their
families, the housing projects where they lived,
their explosive friendships and steadfast loyalties,
and especially about the damage that had turned
each of them into a fighter.
Fascinated
by the freedom the girls had in the ring, Cohen
began training and sparring with them and their
coach–only to find herself astounded by
the strength and authority of her body, and by
the way boxing opened up and brought clarity to
her old issues about eating, anger, sexuality,
and survival.
Spirited
and provocative, Without Apology is Cohen’s
account of what she discovered in the gym: about
herself, about girls who box, and ultimately about
the buried connections between femininity and
aggression.
“Aggression
and desire are inseparable,” writes Cohen.
“For they are forbidden to girls in equal
measure, and they are also in equal measure requisite
for life.” Without Apology is sure to influence
the ways in which all women–mothers and
daughters, athletes and artists, teachers and
learners of every description–see themselves
in the world.