Tripping the Prom Queen: The Truth About Women and Rivalry 
asked by borat on November 1, 2006 3:53 AM
Timely and important -- the groundbreaking book on female rivalry that explores the who, what, when, and why of competition between women. Based on interviews with women across the social spectrum, Susan Shapiro Barash has exploded the myth that women are generally supportive of one another. In fact, the competition between women is more vicious precisely because it is covert. She tells us: - Why women can't and won't admit to rivalry - How women are trained from an early age to compete with one another - In which areas women most heatedly compete - How rivalry is different among women than among men - The differences between competition, envy, and jealousy - When competition is healthy and when it isn't - Why women find it irresistible to trip the prom queen - Useful strategies to stop the competition and forge a new kind of relationship with other women. Tripping the Prom Queen is an engrossing exploration of bad behavior that all women will identify with, and a beacon of hope for a better, more promising future.
Reviews
I loved this book. While she says in the introductory that the book is an exposure of the behavior and not a self-help solution, it would have been nice to have more solutions.
Exposing the behavior was GREAT! I learned so much about my own behavior and that of the people with whom I work. It helped me to ask some better questions concerning my own behavior toward other people and it opened up some great dialogue in our office!
Exposing the behavior was GREAT! I learned so much about my own behavior and that of the people with whom I work. It helped me to ask some better questions concerning my own behavior toward other people and it opened up some great dialogue in our office!
reviewed by alec on November 24, 2006 12:25 AM
Susan Shapiro Barash's Tripping The Prom Queen: The Truth About Women And Rivalry receives Shelly Frasier's warm and revealing voice which has lent power and vision to over 30 audio productions as well as film and theatre projects. Here's the first detailed look at women's rivalry based on original research and interviews with over 500 women at all social levels: a seminal and groundbreaking work which explores bad behavior's origins and purposes.
reviewed by bigben on November 28, 2006 5:01 AM
