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| Named Person: | Betty Friedan |
|---|---|
| Document Type: | Book |
| All Authors / Contributors: |
Stephanie Coontz |
| ISBN: | 9780465002009 0465002005 |
| OCLC Number: | 535492252 |
| Description: | xxiii, 222 pages ; 25 cm |
| Contents: | The unliberated 1960s -- Naming the problem: Friedan's message to American housewives -- After the first feminist wave: women from the 1920s through the 1940s -- The contradictions of womanhood in the 1950s -- "I thought I was crazy" -- The price of privilege: middle-class women and the feminine mystique -- African-American women, working-class women, and the feminine mystique -- Demystifying the Feminine mystique -- Women, men, marriage, and work today: is the feminine mystique dead? |
| Responsibility: | Stephanie Coontz. |
Abstract:
Reviews
Publisher Synopsis
"The Buffalo News""For some of us, this is a jolting 'remember when;' for others, a slice of history forgotten all too soon. For all of us, there remains relevance.""Bookpage""Packed with fascinating statistics and research on 20th-century American social history, including the effect of 'liberation' on middle-class, working-class and African-American women, Coontz shines new light on a landmark work." "Seattle"" Times""This book enriches Coontz's impressive body of work on American family life.... She continues to deftly make history a personal science, persuading readers to ponder those societal yokes we've taken up to wear around our own necks.... "A Strange Stirring" reveals the power of two writers; both are able to see beyond the conventional view and the untold history, and enable the reader to look ahead with new eyes and new questions.""Ladies Home Journal""A fascinating examination of Friedan's much-misunderstood classic, "A Strange Stirring" should be required reading for any young woman today who believes that she's 'not a feminist.' Not only does Stephanie movingly recount how revelatory "The Feminine Mystique" was to the millions of discontented housewives who read it, but she also details - with examples that had me shaking my head in stupefaction - the unbridled sexism that characterized life circa 1963."Michelle Goldberg, "The New Republic""Coontz recounts the catalytic effect that "The Feminine Mystique" had on a great many women. Her book is full of stories of desperate, suffering people who realized they weren't crazy only when they picked up Friedan's bestseller.... But "The Feminine Mystique "is not just an artifact of a benighted era. It still contains important lessons about one of the most important questions of all, which is how to create a meaningful, autonomous life." "Women's Review of Books""Nearly fifty years after "The Feminine Mystique" exploded onto the scene, Stephanie Coontz measures Friedan's outsized reputation against a revealing body of research gleaned from archival sources, oral interviews, and surveys she conducted with nearly 200 women. The result is a brisk, even-handed account of the book's literary achievements, political limitations, and enduring legacy.... Coontz sheds new light on Friedan's savvy as both a writer and an activist. But Coontz is as intent on demystifying "The Feminine Mystique" and stripping away the exaggerated and false claims surrounding it as she is on recounting its merits." "Dissent""[Coontz's] slim volume makes an illuminating companion to the book it examines.... [The] book is engaging, readable, and brief.... [A] worthwhile review of the changes wrought by the past half-century." "Psychotherapy Networker""Engrossing.... Here, as in her previous books...Coontz does what she does best: differentiates between what we think we know about marriage and family life in previous generations and the historical reality. In this case, that means providing a fresh assessment of the impact that Friedan's book had on women of different classes and racial backgrounds, even beyond its white, middle-class, target audience." "Choice" "Coontz has taken on the job of reevaluating Freidan's groundbreaking work and explaining why, despite the flaws that modern commentators have emphasized, it remains important.... Coontz makes a solid case for the valuable aspects of Freidan's analysis, especially her legitimization of the unhappiness experienced by educated post-WWII housewives." Read more...

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Related Subjects:(3)
- Friedan, Betty. -- Feminine mystique.
- Feminism -- United States -- History -- 20th century.
- Women -- United States -- Social conditions -- 20th century.
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