The New Female Antihero, by Sarah Hagelin and Gillian Silverman Catherine Rottenberg enjoys an analysis of a new generation of characters who are transforming the narrative possibilities for women on screen By Catherine Rottenberg 20 January
Motherhood: A Manifesto, by Eliane Glaser Catherine Rottenberg considers a bold critique of all the pressures and half-baked scientific advice that constrain the lives of mothers By Catherine Rottenberg 24 June
The New Internationalists, by Sue Clayton Catherine Rottenberg applauds a bold attempt to forge a politics of solidarity in response to humanitarian crisis By Catherine Rottenberg 4 March
The Smart Wife: Why Siri, Alexa, and Other Smart Home Devices Need a Feminist Reboot, by Yolande Strengers and Jenny Kennedy Catherine Rottenberg enjoys a sharp analysis of the sexual politics behind the devices that provide domestic services By Catherine Rottenberg 2 November
Data Feminism, by Catherine D’Ignazio and Lauren F. Klein Catherine Rottenberg discovers how progressive causes can harness the power of ‘counter-data’ to challenge the status quo By Catherine Rottenberg 20 April
Becoming Beauvoir: A Life, by Kate Kirkpatrick Catherine Rottenberg is inspired by a major new study of the great French feminist By Catherine Rottenberg 28 November
Feminism, by Deborah Cameron Catherine Rottenberg finds much to admire in a provocative new appraisal of the feminist movement By Catherine Rottenberg 26 July
Considering Emma Goldman: Feminist Political Ambivalence and the Imaginative Archive, by Clare Hemmings Catherine Rottenberg asks whether we can include an anarchist activist and writer in a queer, feminist archival history given her refusal to identify as a feminist? By Catherine Rottenberg 22 March