The Whole Woman offers thirty-five self-contained 'chapterkins' of fiery rhetoric, authoritative insight, outrageous humour and broad-ranging debate including Breasts and Girlpower, Mutilation, Sex and Sorrow. Together, they add up to a devastatingly powerful argument, in which Greer shows that, although women have indeed come a very long way in the last thirty years, the notion of our 'having it all' has disguised the persistent discrimination and exploitation that continues to exist for women throughout the world in the basic areas of health, sex, work, politics, marketing and economics.