Carol Gilligan¿s landmark book <i>In a Different Voice</i> ¿ the ¿little book that started a revolution¿ ¿ brought women¿s voices to the fore in work on the self and moral development, enabling women to be heard in their own right, and with their own integrity, for the first time.<br/><br/>Forty years later, Carol Gilligan now returns to the subject matter of her classic book, re-examining its central arguments and concerns from the vantage point of the present. Thanks to the work that she and others have done in recent decades, it is now possible to clarify and articulate what couldn¿t quite be seen or said at the time of the original publication: that the ¿different voice¿ (the voice of care ethics), although initially heard as a ¿feminine¿ voice, is in fact a human voice; that the voice it differs from is a patriarchal voice (bound to gender binaries and hierarchies); and that where patriarchy is in force or enforced, the human voice is a voice of resistance, and care ethics is an