Read The Feminine Mystique Online
Authors: Betty Friedan
servants, domestic, 215, 216, 248, 301, 422
service sector, employment in, 490
sewing, 263â64
Sex and Temperament
(Mead), 168
sex-based differences:
cultural anthropology on, 152â64
in employment, 216â17, 460, 461â62, 463, 466, 467, 473, 490
functionalist sociological endorsement of, 144â50
in life expectancy, 507
in reproductive roles, 157, 158â63
temperamental variety vs., 152â56
sexual fulfillment:
education level vs., 221, 226â27, 330â31, 394â96, 397, 527
n,
541
n
as substitute for self-realization, 306â10, 315â17, 332â36, 380, 400â401
women's equality movement vs., 88, 394â95, 397, 518
n
sexual harassment, 488â89, 492
sexual intercourse:
female passivity and, 131â32, 391
feminine homemaker identity and, 35
frigidity in, 395, 396
identity validation sought in, 18â19
initial age of, 329â31
manuals on techniques of, 310
mutual satisfaction in, 391, 496
orgasm incidence in, 22, 221, 226â27, 331, 383, 394â97, 399, 400â401, 527
n,
535
n
â36
n
premarital, 197â98
transcendence of self in, 392
sexuality:
aging and, 389â90, 541
n
American preoccupation with, 311â12, 313, 321, 400â401, 528
n
biological life cycle of, 320â21, 525
n
consumerist exploitation of, 267â68, 322â23, 528
n
control issues expressed through, 316
depersonalization of, 310, 311, 312â14, 316, 325, 327, 331
extramarital, 307â9, 311, 314â15, 317, 318
Freudian emphasis on, 24, 114â16, 156
of girls, 329â31, 338â39, 341, 346, 360, 361
homosexual, 311, 322, 326, 327â29, 331â32, 470
in mass media, 310, 311â12, 313â14, 322, 529
n
repression of, 19, 24, 77, 112, 114
self-actualization vs., 389â91, 394
self-esteem (dominance feeling) vs., 382â83, 386â87
status-seeking use of, 308, 312â13, 321â23
Victorian inhibition of, 24, 77, 114
Sexual Politics
(Millett), 469
Shakespeare, William, 115
Shaw, Irwin, 218
Sheean, Vincent, 46
sibling rivalry, 220
single-parent families, 497, 498
Sitwell, Edith, 431
slavery, 87, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 101, 103, 394
Smith, Howard, 462
Smith College, xvi, 56, 69, 480
survey of graduates from, xxiâxxii, 517
n
smoking, 504
Snow, C. P., 150
social responsibility, 291, 388, 435â36
social science:
anti-feminist views strengthened in, 139â52, 163, 170, 181
cultural context of, 113â23
education in, 180â81, 183â84, 194, 196â97, 198
see also
anthropology; psychology; sociology
social spending programs, 501â2, 503
social status:
consumerism and, 265, 322â23
feminist movement, 101, 466
sociology:
functionalism in, 137, 140â51, 194, 522
n
women's academic degrees in, 522
n,
523
n
soldiers, 213
as Korean prisoners of war, 341â42, 531
n
â32
n
postwar education of, 446, 447
wartime psychological problems of, 221, 222â23, 225
South:
desegregation in, 27, 433
feminine cultural expectations in, 326, 353
Soviet Union:
female doctors in, 523
n
U.S. space race with, 4, 340
working mothers in, 231
space race, 4, 340
Spinoza, Benedict de, 387
spinsterhood, 173, 181â82
Spock, Benjamin, 58, 231, 531
n
spontaneity, 390, 391
sports, women's participation in, 487, 508â9
SS (
Schutzstaffel
), 369, 371
stability, intellectual development vs., 203
Stanton, Elizabeth Cady, 83, 87, 97, 98, 99, 100, 103
Stassen, Harold, 46
State, U.S. Department of:
female leadership in, 501
Foreign Service employment at, 474
Steinem, Gloria, 472
Stephens College, 181
sterling silver products, 260, 261
Stevenson, Adlai, 56â57
stewardesses, 466
Stewart, Martha, 489
Stolz, Lois Meek, 227â28, 229â30
Stone, Abraham, 529
n
Stone, Lucy, 91â95, 98, 99, 105
Stowe, Harriet Beecher, 505
Strange Stirring, A
(Coontz), xii
Strecker, Edward, 222â25
stress, vulnerability to, 352
student movement, 468, 469
sublimation, 127, 133, 190
suburban life, xvâxvi, xvii
conformity in, 22
housekeeping in, 289â93
insularity of, 321
mobility of, 352
open-plan home design in, 292â93
work opportunities of, 416â17
Suddenly Last Summer
(Williams), 326
Suhl, Yuri, 519
n
suicide, 22, 279, 350â51, 361
superego, 111â12, 127, 137, 199, 343
Supreme Court, U.S.:
abortion rights recognized by, 473, 488
appointments to, 468
symbiosis, emotional, 345â48, 355
Taylor, Elizabeth, 322
Taylor, Harold, 340
Tchambuli culture, 152
teachers, 4, 434, 439, 450, 454, 539
n
temperament, sex-linked differences vs., 152â56
theater of the absurd, 219
Their Mothers' Sons
(Strecker), 222â25
Thomas, M. Carey, 102â3
Thompson, Clara, 125, 331â32, 519
n,
521
n
Thompson, Dorothy, 33â34
Thoreau, Henry David, 387
Tibet, Chinese oppression of, 493
Tillich, Paul, 373, 534
n
time:
housework expenditure of, 282â92, 295â96, 301, 410â11, 412, 413, 423, 432, 528
n
human sense of continuity of, 376â77
Time,
216
Tisserant, Eugène Cardinal, 184
Title IX, 487
Title VII, 461â62, 463, 487
Tobias, Sheila, 468
Tocqueville, Alexis de, 503
togetherness, family, 36, 41â44, 267, 295, 360, 390
toilet training, 116
tranquilizers, 20, 279, 297
Triangle Shirtwaist factory, 103â4
Truth, Sojourner, 101
unconscious mind, 115
Underground Railroad, 96, 104
union movement, 103â4
United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women (1995), 492â93
unskilled labor, 192, 526
n
urban migration, 288, 528
n
vandalism, 341
Vassar College, 172â73, 201â7, 480, 539
n
venereal disease, 341, 531
n
vicarious living, 344, 345, 348â49, 359, 360, 361, 365
Victoria, Queen of England, 141â42
Victorian culture, 284
Freudian theory developed in, 112, 113, 114, 115, 117, 125, 128, 130â31, 140
marital relationships in, 118, 119
scientific determinism in, 115
sexual repression in, 24, 77, 114
Vietnam war, 472
Virginia Military Institute, 505
Virgin Mary, 35
voluntarism, 208, 291â92, 417â18, 419, 422, 503, 528
n
voting participation, 11, 488
voting rights, women's, xix, 94, 96, 99, 101, 102â3, 104â5, 107, 470, 475
wages:
minimum, 501
sex-based differences in, 216, 460, 490
WAM, 182
Warren, Jean, 528
n
washing machines, 256, 286, 305
Weaver, Polly, 429
weight loss efforts, 3, 302
White, Lynn, 182, 527
n
Whitman, Walt, 388, 525
n
widowhood, 208
Williams, Tennessee, 219, 322, 326
Wollstonecraft, Mary, 83, 87, 98
Womanpower,
192, 523
n
Woman's Home Companion,
29, 37, 56
Woman's Party, 104
Woman's Rights Convention (1848), 86, 97
women:
discontinuity in cultural conditioning of, 75â76
Freudian theories on, 110, 111, 112â13, 116â36, 210
infantilization of, 117â19, 149â50, 347â48, 353
life-cycle stages of, 320â21, 525
n
life goals of, 67â70
male hostility toward, 310, 323â24, 325â29, 333â34, 530
n
older, 207â9, 442, 460, 537
n
â39
n
political activism of, 169, 471â73, 494, 499â500, 502
in political office, 472, 473, 494, 501
secondary status of, 110
self-realization forfeited by, 375â406
violence against, 493
voting of, 11, 94, 96, 99, 101, 102â3, 104â5, 107, 470, 475, 488, 500â501
working-class, xii, xix
women's magazines, xiii, 24â53, 58â64
actresses profiled in, 48
advertisements vs. editorial content of, 273â74
career women as heroines in, 29â33, 37, 48, 49, 518
n
on chronic fatigue, 297â99
consumption emphasized in, 62, 63
dependent feminine models in, 39â44
disability articles in, 47
failures of, 63
fiction vs. service articles in, 49â51
glamorous images featured in, 3, 62
homemaker role extolled in, xviii, 33â35, 36â41, 47â48, 58â62
limited editorial content of, 25â28
male control vs. female contributions to, 49, 63, 64, 486â87
political subjects in, 44â46
sexuality in, 310, 312
type enlarged in, 62, 63
women's rights movement,
see
feminist movement
Women's Strike for Equality march (1970), 472
women's studies programs, 468, 505
Women's Two Roles
(Myrdal and Klein), 536
n
â37
n,
540
n
Working Mother,
499
working women, 495
American vs. European, 404, 536
n
â37
n
child-care resources of, 215â16, 290, 451, 465, 540
n
children's psychological difficulties blamed on, 222, 227â31
in community organizations, 417â18
earnings of, 216, 418â19, 460, 490
in factory jobs, 101, 103â4, 217
guilt experienced by, 197, 426
in home-based positions, 423
housekeeping time allocated by, 282, 283, 287â88, 423, 528
n
housewives' resentment of, 428â29
job discrimination experienced by, xviii, 452, 468, 473, 474, 490
male competition with, 216â17
marital happiness of, 398, 426, 427â28
numbers of, 4, 48, 55, 192â93, 222, 489â90, 526
n,
528
n,
536
n
â37
n
older, 4, 208â9, 526
n,
538
n
in part-time jobs, 4, 208, 526
n
in pioneer life, 64, 403â4
religious dogma vs., 424â25
sexual harassment of, 488â89, 492
in subsistence jobs vs. professions, 4, 146â47, 148, 149, 179, 182, 288, 416, 460
urban opportunities for, 290
in wartime, 215â16, 217
see also
careers; career women; employment
World War I, 104, 521
n
World War II, 212â14, 215
American cultural regression after, 217â19
baby boom after, 214
soldiers' psychological difficulties in, 220â21
Wright, Fanny, 88â89
writers, female American, 505â6
Wylie, Ida Alexa Ross, 105â6
Wyoming, woman suffrage rights in, 96
Yale University, 440
youth serum, 77
Further praise for The Feminine Mystique
“No woman did more [than Friedan] to spur the feminist awakening of the 1960s and 70s.”
âMichael Kazin,
New Republic
“If you want to understand the passion that helped fire up the modern women's movement there may be no better place to start than with
The Feminine Mystique
.”
âLynn Neary, NPR
“What strikes me most about Friedan's work is the bravery and boldness of her argument. . . . She called it as she saw it, without equivocation or apology. Her well-chosen words still pack a wallop; I can only begin to imagine their impact in 1963.”
âVinca LaFleur,
Elle
“If American women look at their lives today, they are seeing Betty Friedan's legacy in action.”
âNaomi Wolf,
Time
“[The] gasp factor keeps
The Feminine Mystique
evergreen.”
âJanet Maslin,
New York Times
“Brilliant. . . . [Friedan] succeeded where no other feminist writer had. She touched the lives of ordinary readers.”
âLouis Menand,
The New Yorker
“
The Feminine Mystique
has a larger and deeper vision: . . . an adult cannot thrive in a culture that infantilizes her. If Rousseau had not been a mad misogynist, he would have applauded Friedan.”
âKatha Pollitt,
The Nation
“Has the power to surprise and unsettle.”
â
New York Times
“[Friedan] wants mothersâindeed, all peopleâto âlean in' to life's work and not fear inevitable difficulties that arise when trying to âhave it all' and juggle work and family. . . . Betty Friedan wrote
The Feminine Mystique
50 years ago, but today her wisdom still merits sharing.”
âNanette Fondas,
The Atlantic
“
The Feminine Mystique
forever changed the conversation as well as the way women view themselves. If you've never read it, read it now and reflect on what our mothers and grandmothers were feeling at the time. It's a great moment to celebrate this milestone work, which fundamentally altered the course of women's lives.”
âArianna Huffington,
O, The Oprah Magazine
“Betty Friedan is my favorite feminist.”
âAshley Fetter,
The Atlantic
“One of those rare books we are endowed with only once in decades, a volume that launched a major social movement. . . . Betty Friedan is a liberator of women and men.”
âAmitai Etzioni, author of
The Spirit of Community: The Reinvention of American Society
“Remarkably inspiring and definitely worth revisitingâor reading for the very first timeâwhatever generation you belong to.”
â
Bookpage
“In a supposedly postfeminist world, many of today's women are happy to own [their] choices, and believe that manipulation has nothing to do with it;
The Feminine Mystique
insists on placing the very idea of choice in its truer . . . context.”
âAndi Zeisler,
Los Angeles Review of Books
“Written with a passionate drive. . . . It will leave you with some haunting facts as well as a few hair-raising stories. That
The Feminine Mystique
is at the same time a scholarly work, appropriate for serious study, only adds to its usefulness.”
âLillian Smith,
Saturday Review
“A highly readable, provocative book.”
âLucy Freeman,
New York Times Book Review
“More than any other factor, Betty's book opened our eyes and our minds to the possibilities of a richer, more meaningful life for women.”
âAnn W. Richards, late governor of Texas
“Illuminating. . . . Friedan's groundbreaking book and Simone de Beauvoir's
Second Sex
are the twin pillars on which the entire women's movement was constructed. We still can't do without them.”
âMarilyn Yalom, author of
A History of the Breast
“[Friedan is a] bridge between conservative and radical elements in feminism, an ardent advocate of harmony and human values.”
âMarilyn French,
Esquire
“A vastly significant book that has made a world of difference, much of it slowly acquired.”
â
Kirkus Reviews