WASHINGTON — Supreme Court justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg is fluent in Swedish, her early feminism shaped by years she spent in that paragon of gender-equal policy in the 1960s. But on Thursday night, it was the neighboring Danish territory (also very feminist) that welcomed the justice to honor her with an award.
There was impeccable, authentic Danish modern furniture, and two Danish men, including the ambassador, professed their personal and national commitment to gender equality. But it was Ginsburg’s friend Nina Totenberg, the NPR correspondent presenting her with the award from the International Center for Research on Women, who made things merry.
Just hours earlier, Simon & Schuster had announced to great fanfare that Ginsburg would publish “My Own Words” in January, a collection of her writing and speeches. As Ginsburg grinned gamely, Totenberg teased the justice for falling asleep at the State of the Union last year and talked up her bestselling fame (including a recent biography by this reporter).
“Anyone who went parasailing in her seventies and who at the age of 82 still does pushups — what can I say, of course she’s become something of a rock star for women of all ages,” said Totenberg. She called Ginsburg “a demure firebrand. Architect of the battle for women’s rights. Brilliant jurist and respectful but fierce occasional dissenter.”
All of this, Totenberg said, was commensurate with Ginsburg’s contribution to social progress. “Ruth Bader Ginsburg quite simply changed the way the world is for American women,” Totenberg said. “And she did it before she became a Supreme Court justice.”









