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Laura Kipnis is an American cultural critic, essayist, and filmmaker. She is a professor at Northwestern University, where she teaches courses in media studies, gender studies, and film. She is the author of six books, including Unwanted Advances: Sexual Paranoia Comes to Campus, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. Kipnis was born in Chicago, Illinois, and grew up in the city's North Shore suburbs. She attended the University of Wisconsin–Madison, where she earned a bachelor's degree in English literature in 1978. She then attended the University of Chicago, where she earned a master's degree in English literature in 1981 and a PhD in 1985. Kipnis has written extensively on topics such as gender, sexuality, power, and media. Her books include Against Love: A Polemic (2003), How to Become a Scandal: Adventures in Bad Behavior (2007), Men: Notes from an Ongoing Investigation (2013), and Unwanted Advances: Sexual Paranoia Comes to Campus (2017). She has also written for The New York Times, The New Yorker, Harper's Magazine, The Atlantic, and other publications. Kipnis has been the recipient of numerous awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship, and a National Endowment for the Humanities Fellowship. She has also been a visiting professor at Harvard University, the University of California, Berkeley, and the University of Chicago.

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Age 67 years old
Zodiac Sign Cancer
Born 19 July, 1956
Birthday 19 July
Birthplace Chicago, Illinois, United States
Nationality United States

We recommend you to check the complete list of Famous People born on 19 July. She is a member of famous with the age 67 years old group.

Laura Kipnis Height, Weight & Measurements

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Laura Kipnis Net Worth

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Timeline

2019

Here’s a historical and political way of looking at the current moment. There have been, roughly speaking, two divergent tendencies in the struggle for women’s rights that come together in the issue of workplace harassment, which is why I think this all seems so significant. If you look at the history of feminism, going back to the 19th century, you’ve got, on the one hand, the struggle for what I’d call civic rights: the right to employment, the right to vote, to enter politics and public life. On the other side, there’s the struggle for women to have autonomy over our own bodies, meaning access to birth control, activism around rape, outlawing marital rape, and the fight for abortion rights. What we’re seeing now is the incomplete successes in both of these areas converging. We’ve never entirely attained civic equality. We’ve never entirely attained autonomy over our bodies. Which is why the right not to be sexually harassed in the workplace is the next important frontier in equality for women.

Kipnis wrote, in a New York Times opinion piece "The Perils of Publishing in a #MeToo Moment" protesting the journal's firing of editor Ian Buruma: "One consequence of Mr. Buruma’s departure will be a new layer of safeguards we won’t even know are in place, including safeguards from the sort of intellectual risks The New York Review of Books always stood for."

2017

Kipnis's 2017 book, Unwanted Advances: Sexual Paranoia Comes to Campus discusses the Ludlow case and argues that sexual harassment policies do not empower women but rather impede the fight for gender equality. One of the students who had brought the Title IX complaints against Ludlow initiated a lawsuit naming Kipnis and her publisher, HarperCollins, alleging invasion of privacy and defamation. Kipnis has publicly stated, "In case there’s any confusion, Unwanted Advances remains in print and I stand by everything in the book." Unwanted Advances was named one of the Wall Street Journal's ten best non-fiction books of 2017. Jennifer Senior wrote in the New York Times, “Few people have taken on the excesses of university culture with the brio that Kipnis has. Her anger gives her argument the energy of a live cable.”

In addition to speaking on college campuses around the country about issues related to feminism, free speech, #MeToo, campus sexual politics, and gender equity, in 2017 Kipnis participated in a New York Times Magazine roundtable on the subject of "Work, Fairness, Sex and Ambition" together with Anita Hill and Soledad O’Brien. Kipnis said:

2015

In March 2015, after Northwestern University professor Peter Ludlow had been accused of sexual harassment, Kipnis wrote an essay in the Chronicle of Higher Education in which she decried "sexual paranoia" on campuses and discussed professor-student sexual relationships and trigger warnings. The essay was later included in the Best American Essays of 2016, edited by Jonathan Franzen.

2010

In 2010 she published How to Become a Scandal: Adventures in Bad Behavior, which focused on scandal, including those of Eliot Spitzer, Linda Tripp, James Frey, Sol Wachtler, and Lisa Nowak; the book examined "the elaborate ways those transgressors reassure themselves that they are not bringing colossal ruin upon themselves, that their dalliances will never see the light of day". "What allows for scandal in Kipnis's schema is every individual's blind spot, "a little existential joke on humankind (or in some cases, a ticking time bomb) nestled at the core of every lonely consciousness...Ostensibly about scandal, her book is most memorable as a convincing case for the ultimate unknowability of the self".

2003

In her 2003 book Against Love: A Polemic, a "ragingly witty yet contemplative look at the discontents of domestic and erotic relationships, Kipnis combines portions of the slashing sexual contrarianism of Mailer, the scathing antidomestic wit of early Roseanne Barr and the coolly analytical aesthetics of early Sontag."