'Everyone's Seen My Tits' Is a Cheeky Title for a Memoir About Gender and Sexual Trauma
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'Everyone's Seen My Tits' Is a Cheeky Title for a Memoir About Gender and Sexual Trauma
"It was bizarre, the thought of people around the country doing their morning routines, drinking tea, eating slices of toast," Hazell writes."
""When I was 8, I was having an argument with my cousins about men's and women's places and I was like, women have to do everything: the cooking, the cleaning, they have jobs! The guys do nothing!" she told Jezebel via Zoom from her Los Angeles home late last month."
"how it felt to be contributing to rape culture by getting her kit off (to use a Britishism)."
Keeley Hazell shot to British notoriety in the mid-2000s as a Page 3 girl featured in tabloids. She grew up working-class in Lewisham, London, amid intergenerational poverty, addiction, and domestic abuse. Everyone's Seen My Tits is subtitled Stories & Reflections from an Unlikely Feminist and details Hazell's early feminist observations and later articulation of gender-equality commitments. Hazell experienced ostracism from some feminists who considered her topless modeling incompatible with feminism. One pivotal episode centers on a journalist asking whether posing topless contributed to rape culture. Page 3 ceased regular publication in 2015.
Read at Jezebel
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