Half the Sky

by

Nicholas Kristof

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Half the Sky makes teaching easy.

Sheryl WuDunn Character Analysis

WuDunn is one of the authors of Half the Sky and a champion for women entrepreneurs. Like Kristof, she conducts on-the-ground reporting on global humanitarian issues. She appears in the narrative of Half the Sky less frequently than Kristof does, but as a co-author operates as a type of implied presence in conjunction with Kristof.

Sheryl WuDunn Quotes in Half the Sky

The Half the Sky quotes below are all either spoken by Sheryl WuDunn or refer to Sheryl WuDunn. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Oppression of Women  Theme Icon
).
Introduction Quotes

In the nineteenth century, the central moral challenge was slavery. In the twentieth century, it was the battle against totalitarianism. We believe that in this century the paramount moral challenge will be the struggle for gender equality around the world.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: xvii
Explanation and Analysis:

Many of the stories in this book are wrenching, but keep in mind this central truth: Women aren’t the problem but the solution. The plight of girls is no more a tragedy than an opportunity.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: xviii
Explanation and Analysis:

Honor killings, sexual slavery, and genital cutting may seem to Western readers to be tragic but inevitable in a world far, far away. In much the same way, slavery was once widely viewed by many decent Europeans and Americans as a regrettable but ineluctable feature of human life. It was just one more horror that had existed for thousands of years. But then in the 1780s a few indignant Britons, led by William Wilberforce, decided that slavery was so offensive that they had to abolish it. And they did. Today we see the seed of something similar: a global movement to emancipate women and girls...So let us be clear about this up front: We hope to recruit you to join an incipient movement to emancipate women and fight global poverty by unlocking women’s power as economic catalysts. That is the process under way—not a drama of victimization but of empowerment, the kind that transforms bubbly teenage girls from brothel slaves into successful businesswomen.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: xxii
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 1 Quotes

People always ask how they can help...A starting point is to be brutally realistic about the complexities of achieving change. To be blunt, humanitarians sometimes exaggerate and oversell, eliding pitfalls. They sometimes torture frail data until it yields the demanded ‘proof’ of success.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Meena Hasina
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2 Quotes

The tools to crush modern slavery exist, but the political will is lacking. That must be the starting point of any abolitionist movement.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 24
Explanation and Analysis:

Rescuing girls from brothels is the easy part, however. The challenge is keeping them from returning. The stigma that the girls feel in their communities after being freed, coupled with drug dependencies or threats from pimps, often lead them to return to the red-light district. It’s enormously dispiriting for well-meaning aid workers who oversee a brothel raid to take the girls back to a shelter and give them food and medical care, only to see the girls climb over the back wall.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Srey Neth, Srey Momm
Page Number: 35
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

‘Empowerment’ is a cliché in the aid community, but it is truly what is needed. The first step toward greater justice is to transform that culture of female docility and subservience, so that women themselves become more assertive and demanding. As we said earlier, that is, of course, easy for outsiders like us to say: We’re not the ones who run horrible risks for speaking up. But when a woman does stand up, it’s imperative that outsiders champion her; we also must nurture institutions to protect such people.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Usha Narayane, Akku Yadav, Goretti Nyabenda
Page Number: 53
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

Surveys suggest that about one third of all women worldwide face beatings in the home. Women aged fifteen through forty-four are more likely to be maimed or die from male violence than from cancer, malaria, traffic accidents, and war combined.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 61
Explanation and Analysis:

“We sometimes think that Westerners invest too much effort in changing unjust laws and not enough in changing culture, by building schools or assisting grassroots movements. Even in the United States, after all, what brought equal rights to blacks wasn’t the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments passed after the Civil War, but rather the grassroots civil rights movement nearly one hundred years later. Laws matter, but typically changing the law by itself accomplishes little.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Molly Melching
Page Number: 66
Explanation and Analysis:

“Behind the rapes and other abuse heaped on women in much of the world, it’s hard not to see something more sinister than just libido and prurient opportunism. Namely: sexism and misogyny. How else to explain why so many more witches were burned than wizards? Why is acid thrown in women’s faces, but not in men’s? Why are women so much more likely to be stripped naked and sexually humiliated than men? Why is it that in many cultures, old men are respected as patriarchs, while old women are taken outside the village to die of thirst or to be eaten by wild animals? Granted, in the societies where these abuses take place, men also suffer more violence than males do in America—but the brutality inflicted on women is particularly widespread, cruel, and lethal.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Woinshet Zebene , Aberew Jemma
Page Number: 67
Explanation and Analysis:

“In short, women themselves absorb and transmit misogynistic values, just as men do. This is not a tidy world of tyrannical men and victimized women, but a messier realm of oppressive social customs adhered to by men and women alike.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Zoya Najabi
Page Number: 69
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

“In short, rape becomes a tool of war in conservative societies precisely because female sexuality is so sacred. Codes of sexual honor, in which women are valued based on their chastity, ostensibly protect women, but in fact they create an environment in which women are systematically dishonored.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Du’a Aswad
Page Number: 83
Explanation and Analysis:

“Young people often ask us how they can help address issues like sex trafficking or international poverty. Our first recommendation to them is to get out and see the world. If you can’t do that, it’s great to raise money or attention at home. But to tackle an issue effectively, you need to understand it —and it’s impossible to understand an issue by simply reading about it. You need to see it firsthand, even live in its midst. One of the great failings of the American education system, in our view, is that young people can graduate from university without any understanding of poverty at home or abroad.” Chapter 5

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Harper McConnell
Page Number: 88
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

“No one reading this book, we hope, can fathom the sadistic cruelty of those soldiers who used a pointed stick to tear apart Dina's insides. But there is also a milder, more diffuse cruelty of indifference, and it is global indifference that leaves some 3 million women and girls incontinent just like Dina.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Dina, Mahabouba Muhammad
Page Number: 93
Explanation and Analysis:

“So lifetime risk of maternal death is one thousand times higher in a poor country than in the West. That should be an international scandal.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Catherine Hamlin
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

Religion plays a particularly profound role in shaping policies on population and family planning, and secular liberals and conservative Christians regularly square off. Each side has the best of intentions, yet each is deeply suspicious of the other—and these suspicions make it difficult to forge a broad left-right coalition that would be far more effective in confronting trafficking and overcoming the worst kinds of poverty.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Rose Wanjera
Page Number: 132
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Westerners sometimes feel sorry for Muslim women in a way that make them uncomfortable, even angry... Americans not only come across as patronizing but also often miss the complexity of gender roles in the Islamic world.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 150
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

That is the power of education. One study after another has shown that educating girls is one of the most effective ways to fight poverty. Schooling is also often a precondition for girls and women to stand up against injustice, and for women to be integrated into the economy. Until women are numerate and literate, it is difficult for them to start businesses or contribute meaningfully to their national economies.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Dai Manju
Page Number: 169
Explanation and Analysis:

Anybody traveling in Africa can see that aid is much harder to get right than people usually realize.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Molly Melching
Page Number: 176
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

It is not uncommon to stumble across a mother mourning a child who has just died of malaria for want of a $5 mosquito bed net and then find the child's father at a bar, where he spends $5 each week. Several studies suggest that when women gain control over spending, less family money is devoted to instant gratification and more for education and starting small businesses. Because men now typically control the purse strings, it appears that the poorest families in the world typically spend approximately ten times as much (20 percent of their income on average) on a combination of alcohol, prostitutes, candy, sugary drinks, and lavish feasts as they do on educating their children.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 192
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

So was it cultural imperialism for Westerners to criticize foot-binding and female infanticide? Perhaps. But it was also the right thing to do. If we believe firmly in certain values, such as the equality of all human beings regardless of color or gender, then we should not be afraid to stand up for them; it would be feckless to defer to slavery, torture, foot-binding, honor killings, or genital cutting just because we believe in respecting other faiths or cultures. One lesson of China is that we need not accept that discrimination is an intractable element of any society. If culture were immutable, China would still be impoverished and Sheryl would be stumbling along on three-inch feet.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 207
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

Incredibly, it looks as if [grassroots activists] will make female genital cutting in West Africa go the way of foot-binding in China. That makes the campaign against genital cutting a model for a larger global movement for women in the developing world. If we want to move beyond slogans, we would do well to learn the lessons of the long struggle against genital cutting.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Molly Melching
Page Number: 221
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

The unfortunate reality is that women’s issues are marginalized, and in any sex trafficking and mass rape should no more be seen as women’s issues than slavery was a black issue or the Holocaust was a Jewish issue. These are all humanitarian concerns, transcending any one race, gender, or creed.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 234
Explanation and Analysis:

Think about the major issues confronting us in this century. These include war, insecurity, and terrorism; population pressures, environmental strains, and climate change; poverty and income gaps. For all these diverse problems, empowering women is part of the answer. Most obviously, educating girls and bringing them into the formal economy will yield economic dividends and help address global poverty.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 238
Explanation and Analysis:

We like to think of aid as a kind of lubricant, a few drops of oil in the crankcase of the developing world, so that gears move freely again on their own.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Jo Luck , Tererai Trent
Page Number: 242
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Half the Sky LitChart as a printable PDF.
Half the Sky PDF

Sheryl WuDunn Quotes in Half the Sky

The Half the Sky quotes below are all either spoken by Sheryl WuDunn or refer to Sheryl WuDunn. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
The Oppression of Women  Theme Icon
).
Introduction Quotes

In the nineteenth century, the central moral challenge was slavery. In the twentieth century, it was the battle against totalitarianism. We believe that in this century the paramount moral challenge will be the struggle for gender equality around the world.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: xvii
Explanation and Analysis:

Many of the stories in this book are wrenching, but keep in mind this central truth: Women aren’t the problem but the solution. The plight of girls is no more a tragedy than an opportunity.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: xviii
Explanation and Analysis:

Honor killings, sexual slavery, and genital cutting may seem to Western readers to be tragic but inevitable in a world far, far away. In much the same way, slavery was once widely viewed by many decent Europeans and Americans as a regrettable but ineluctable feature of human life. It was just one more horror that had existed for thousands of years. But then in the 1780s a few indignant Britons, led by William Wilberforce, decided that slavery was so offensive that they had to abolish it. And they did. Today we see the seed of something similar: a global movement to emancipate women and girls...So let us be clear about this up front: We hope to recruit you to join an incipient movement to emancipate women and fight global poverty by unlocking women’s power as economic catalysts. That is the process under way—not a drama of victimization but of empowerment, the kind that transforms bubbly teenage girls from brothel slaves into successful businesswomen.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: xxii
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 1 Quotes

People always ask how they can help...A starting point is to be brutally realistic about the complexities of achieving change. To be blunt, humanitarians sometimes exaggerate and oversell, eliding pitfalls. They sometimes torture frail data until it yields the demanded ‘proof’ of success.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Meena Hasina
Page Number: 17
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 2 Quotes

The tools to crush modern slavery exist, but the political will is lacking. That must be the starting point of any abolitionist movement.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 24
Explanation and Analysis:

Rescuing girls from brothels is the easy part, however. The challenge is keeping them from returning. The stigma that the girls feel in their communities after being freed, coupled with drug dependencies or threats from pimps, often lead them to return to the red-light district. It’s enormously dispiriting for well-meaning aid workers who oversee a brothel raid to take the girls back to a shelter and give them food and medical care, only to see the girls climb over the back wall.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Srey Neth, Srey Momm
Page Number: 35
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 3 Quotes

‘Empowerment’ is a cliché in the aid community, but it is truly what is needed. The first step toward greater justice is to transform that culture of female docility and subservience, so that women themselves become more assertive and demanding. As we said earlier, that is, of course, easy for outsiders like us to say: We’re not the ones who run horrible risks for speaking up. But when a woman does stand up, it’s imperative that outsiders champion her; we also must nurture institutions to protect such people.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Usha Narayane, Akku Yadav, Goretti Nyabenda
Page Number: 53
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 4 Quotes

Surveys suggest that about one third of all women worldwide face beatings in the home. Women aged fifteen through forty-four are more likely to be maimed or die from male violence than from cancer, malaria, traffic accidents, and war combined.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 61
Explanation and Analysis:

“We sometimes think that Westerners invest too much effort in changing unjust laws and not enough in changing culture, by building schools or assisting grassroots movements. Even in the United States, after all, what brought equal rights to blacks wasn’t the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments passed after the Civil War, but rather the grassroots civil rights movement nearly one hundred years later. Laws matter, but typically changing the law by itself accomplishes little.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Molly Melching
Page Number: 66
Explanation and Analysis:

“Behind the rapes and other abuse heaped on women in much of the world, it’s hard not to see something more sinister than just libido and prurient opportunism. Namely: sexism and misogyny. How else to explain why so many more witches were burned than wizards? Why is acid thrown in women’s faces, but not in men’s? Why are women so much more likely to be stripped naked and sexually humiliated than men? Why is it that in many cultures, old men are respected as patriarchs, while old women are taken outside the village to die of thirst or to be eaten by wild animals? Granted, in the societies where these abuses take place, men also suffer more violence than males do in America—but the brutality inflicted on women is particularly widespread, cruel, and lethal.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Woinshet Zebene , Aberew Jemma
Page Number: 67
Explanation and Analysis:

“In short, women themselves absorb and transmit misogynistic values, just as men do. This is not a tidy world of tyrannical men and victimized women, but a messier realm of oppressive social customs adhered to by men and women alike.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Zoya Najabi
Page Number: 69
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 5 Quotes

“In short, rape becomes a tool of war in conservative societies precisely because female sexuality is so sacred. Codes of sexual honor, in which women are valued based on their chastity, ostensibly protect women, but in fact they create an environment in which women are systematically dishonored.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Du’a Aswad
Page Number: 83
Explanation and Analysis:

“Young people often ask us how they can help address issues like sex trafficking or international poverty. Our first recommendation to them is to get out and see the world. If you can’t do that, it’s great to raise money or attention at home. But to tackle an issue effectively, you need to understand it —and it’s impossible to understand an issue by simply reading about it. You need to see it firsthand, even live in its midst. One of the great failings of the American education system, in our view, is that young people can graduate from university without any understanding of poverty at home or abroad.” Chapter 5

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Harper McConnell
Page Number: 88
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 6 Quotes

“No one reading this book, we hope, can fathom the sadistic cruelty of those soldiers who used a pointed stick to tear apart Dina's insides. But there is also a milder, more diffuse cruelty of indifference, and it is global indifference that leaves some 3 million women and girls incontinent just like Dina.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Dina, Mahabouba Muhammad
Page Number: 93
Explanation and Analysis:

“So lifetime risk of maternal death is one thousand times higher in a poor country than in the West. That should be an international scandal.”

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Catherine Hamlin
Page Number: 99
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 8 Quotes

Religion plays a particularly profound role in shaping policies on population and family planning, and secular liberals and conservative Christians regularly square off. Each side has the best of intentions, yet each is deeply suspicious of the other—and these suspicions make it difficult to forge a broad left-right coalition that would be far more effective in confronting trafficking and overcoming the worst kinds of poverty.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Rose Wanjera
Page Number: 132
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

Westerners sometimes feel sorry for Muslim women in a way that make them uncomfortable, even angry... Americans not only come across as patronizing but also often miss the complexity of gender roles in the Islamic world.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 150
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 10 Quotes

That is the power of education. One study after another has shown that educating girls is one of the most effective ways to fight poverty. Schooling is also often a precondition for girls and women to stand up against injustice, and for women to be integrated into the economy. Until women are numerate and literate, it is difficult for them to start businesses or contribute meaningfully to their national economies.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Dai Manju
Page Number: 169
Explanation and Analysis:

Anybody traveling in Africa can see that aid is much harder to get right than people usually realize.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Molly Melching
Page Number: 176
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 11 Quotes

It is not uncommon to stumble across a mother mourning a child who has just died of malaria for want of a $5 mosquito bed net and then find the child's father at a bar, where he spends $5 each week. Several studies suggest that when women gain control over spending, less family money is devoted to instant gratification and more for education and starting small businesses. Because men now typically control the purse strings, it appears that the poorest families in the world typically spend approximately ten times as much (20 percent of their income on average) on a combination of alcohol, prostitutes, candy, sugary drinks, and lavish feasts as they do on educating their children.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 192
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 12 Quotes

So was it cultural imperialism for Westerners to criticize foot-binding and female infanticide? Perhaps. But it was also the right thing to do. If we believe firmly in certain values, such as the equality of all human beings regardless of color or gender, then we should not be afraid to stand up for them; it would be feckless to defer to slavery, torture, foot-binding, honor killings, or genital cutting just because we believe in respecting other faiths or cultures. One lesson of China is that we need not accept that discrimination is an intractable element of any society. If culture were immutable, China would still be impoverished and Sheryl would be stumbling along on three-inch feet.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 207
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 13 Quotes

Incredibly, it looks as if [grassroots activists] will make female genital cutting in West Africa go the way of foot-binding in China. That makes the campaign against genital cutting a model for a larger global movement for women in the developing world. If we want to move beyond slogans, we would do well to learn the lessons of the long struggle against genital cutting.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Molly Melching
Page Number: 221
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

The unfortunate reality is that women’s issues are marginalized, and in any sex trafficking and mass rape should no more be seen as women’s issues than slavery was a black issue or the Holocaust was a Jewish issue. These are all humanitarian concerns, transcending any one race, gender, or creed.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 234
Explanation and Analysis:

Think about the major issues confronting us in this century. These include war, insecurity, and terrorism; population pressures, environmental strains, and climate change; poverty and income gaps. For all these diverse problems, empowering women is part of the answer. Most obviously, educating girls and bringing them into the formal economy will yield economic dividends and help address global poverty.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker)
Page Number: 238
Explanation and Analysis:

We like to think of aid as a kind of lubricant, a few drops of oil in the crankcase of the developing world, so that gears move freely again on their own.

Related Characters: Nicholas D. Kristof (speaker), Sheryl WuDunn (speaker), Jo Luck , Tererai Trent
Page Number: 242
Explanation and Analysis: