Sent to you by Tee via Google Reader: Original Author of “Act Like a
Lady Think Like a Man” Says Steve Harvey is using her original title
and theme to send a distorted message of empowerment to women via Black
Politics on the Web by The Admin on 4/8/09
Author Sharon P. Carson of Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man, says the
Steve Harvey’s book of the same name is a misrepresented take on her
original work. Carson, who is pursuing her rights under unfair
competition laws, secured a copyright for the title in 2004, and then
established www.actlikealadythinklikeaman.com.

Harvey’s book, published in January of this year, copies the title and
theme of her work, says Carson, and takes some of her authentic
thoughts and conclusions and contorts them into a detrimental message
for women. Carson says his approach is a distorted view of her original
vision.

Carson says her self-published book was written, “To encourage women to
accept and appreciate who they are both inside and out and to respect
themselves and demand respect from their male counter part.” She also
felt women need to be as tough minded as men are in relationships,
which is how she created the title, Act Like a Lady, Think Like a Man.

Harvey has stated the title for his book came through an editor, but
originally contained the word “girl” instead of “lady,” a substitution
for which he takes credit.

An excerpt from Carson’s book discusses the unnecessary concept of
women changing themselves physically for their partner: “Why should
women become someone they hate in order to please someone they think
they love? What if the relationship ends, will they have to change
again to please the next man?”

An excerpt from Harvey’s book, on p. 207, mirrors Carson’s point: “But
if you’re telling your man you want a nose job and he sees nothing
wrong with the nose you already have then maybe you ought to think
about leaving your nose alone. Why run the risk of something going
wrong when your man is already happy with the way you look? Why lose
the extra weight if your man is happy with you the way you are?”

In addition to reworking her original ideas, Carson objects to the
anti-empowerment message of Harvey’s take on a successful woman, per p.
182: “If you’ve got your own money, your own car, your own house, a
Brinks alarm system, a pistol and a guard dog and your practically
shouting from the roof that you don’t need a man to provide for you or
protect you, then we will see no need to keep coming around.”

Carson asks, “How does this message empower us as women? Should we
prepare for success so that we can provide and protect ourselves or
should we forgo that and wait for a man come along and do it for us?”

While Carson is looking into protecting her own rights as an author,
she also is concerned about getting her message out there—that women
are their own authority, they are complete with, or without, a man.

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