Books
BOOKS
Naked Feminism: Breaking the Cult of Female Modesty (2023)
Order Naked Feminism here or here.
Find out more at NakedFeminism.com
Is it right that, despite the promises of feminism, women’s bodies remain at the mercy of state, society and religion? Should a scantily-clad woman, or a promiscuous one, be worth less than a fully-covered woman, or a chaste one? Are being sexy, and being smart, really mutually exclusive? Can a woman be both body and brain? Victoria Bateman has confronted these questions with actions as well as words. She has appeared naked on national television, on stage, in art, and at protests - using her body, as well as her brain, to deliver her message.
In Naked Feminism, Bateman makes a compelling case for women’s bodily freedom, and explains why the current puritanical revival is so dangerous for women. She takes us on a journey, illustrating the swinging pendulum of bodily modesty through the ages, from the ancient civilisations of Egypt and Babylon through to the birth of Christianity and Islam, to the lax morals of the medieval period and the bawdiness of Chaucer and Shakespeare, to the clampdowns of the Puritans and later the Victorians, and, more recently, to the re-veiling of the Middle East and the purity pledges of modern day America. She ends with a plea: feminists must unite to challenge the repression of the female body, as only then can women be truly free.
The Sex Factor: How Women made the West Rich (2019)
FT and GQ Magazine Summer Read and The Guardian Book of the Day
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Why did the West become so rich? Why is inequality rising? How ‘free’ should markets be? And what does sex have to do with it? In this book, Victoria Bateman shows how we can only understand the burning economic issues of our time if we put sex and gender – ‘the sex factor’ – at the heart of the picture. Spanning the globe and drawing on thousands of years of history, Bateman tells a bold story about how the status and freedom of women are central to our prosperity. Genuine female empowerment requires us not only to recognize the liberating potential of markets and smart government policies but also to challenge the double-standard of many modern feminists when they celebrate the brain while denigrating the body.
Listen to Victoria speak about The Sex Factor at the Hay Literary Festival here.
Praise for The Sex Factor
Reviews of The Sex Factor
For much of history, life was ‘poor, nasty, brutish, and short’, and people could not look forward to a better life for their children and grandchildren. One of the most important questions that economic historians therefore seek to answer, is: How did we go from a situation in which for centuries the average level of economic growth was close to zero, to a new era from the early nineteenth century onwards in which incomes rose year on year? And, related to this, why was Europe the first region to see this process of ‘modern economic growth’? One particularly popular answer to the question of what created long-run economic growth is the development of markets. This book aims to assess the validity of this assertion. It tracks the development of markets in different parts of Europe from the fourteenth through to the nineteenth century, explores the causes of market integration and disintegration (including geography, state formation and war), and considers the relationship between markets and economic growth. It finds that the most economically successful parts of Europe, including the UK and the Netherlands, were those in which markets developed early on, but that these markets were not sufficient to place them on the path to success. If they had been, the Industrial Revolution would have taken place centuries before it did. In addition to markets, this book finds that a well functioning state and the Enlightenment also mattered for economic growth. In The Sex Factor, Victoria digs deeper, exploring how women’s freedoms sowed the seeds for both better markets and a better state, creating a whole that was more than the sum of its parts.
An extract from the book can be found on Google Books, and summaries of the book include those from the University of Cambridge and CapX.