The Feminine Mystique Essay

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    In 1963, Betty Friedan published The Feminine Mystique which was revolutionary for that time and exposed the “happy homemaker myth”. Ms. Friedan discussed how women “feel it’s unfeminine” to want to take an active part in society on equal footing as men. More specifically, Ms. Friedan is quoted saying, “a woman today has been made to feel freakish and alone and guilty if she wants to be more than her husband’s wife, her children’s mother, if she wants to use her abilities in society.” This feeling

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    Both The Feminine Mystique and “Shooting an Elephant” discuss the confrontation between the self and society. In The Feminine Mystique, Betty Friedan addresses “The Problem That Has No Name” referring to the widespread unhappiness of the housewife due to their obligation to uphold their ideal image rather than pursuing their dreams; in “Shooting an Elephant”, George Orwell comments on the societal expectations of imperialism and its effects on people who have the duty to uphold the law. In both of

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    the second wave of feminism, Friedan was an influential women’s right activist during the twentieth century but her legacy has continued to strive well into the twenty-first century. Friedan is the author of a variety of books including The Feminine Mystique, which became a phenomenon because of its powerful message to women for self-exploration outside their traditional roles. This book helped to define Friedan’s role in the fight for women empowerment and equality. It evoked emotions in many women

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    Potter 1 Rebecca Potter Gray Section 4975 12 May 2015 Primary Source Analysis on The Feminine Mystique The Feminine Mystique is the title of a book written by Betty Friedan who has also founded The National Organization for Women (NOW) to help US women gain equal rights. She describes the "Feminine Mystique" as the heightened awareness of the expectations of women and how each woman has to fit a certain role as a little girl, an uneducated and unemployed teenager, and finally as a wife and

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    58. Betty Friedan The Feminine Mystique 1963 The text “The Feminine Mystique”, introduces the discussing with the title "The Problem That Has No Name." Betty Friedan uses this to generally mention the discontent of women, as young as ten years old, in the 1920’s throughout the 1960’s. Friedan argues the movement in marriages and births that affected women. Friedan describes the emotional distress of being inferior and limited because of gender. It was believed that women must learn how to catch

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    FRATERRIGO, ELIZABETH. "The Happy Housewife Heroine" And "The Sexual Sell." Frontiers: A Journal Of Women Studies 36.2 (2015): 33-40. SocINDEX with Full Text. Web. 7 Nov. 2016. This article focuses on Betty Friedan and the Feminine Mystique. Fraterrigo examines the Feminine Mystique and the problem has no name. She focuses on Friedan disapproval of housework bring an ultimate fulfillment for a woman. Friedan says that society encourages women to embrace the role of a wife and mother. She blamed advertisers

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    “The Importance of Work” is an essay from The Feminine Mystique, by Betty Friedan. The whole essay talks about how humans can contribute to the society with their full capacities through work and that women should hold jobs equivalent to men. Friedan insists that men and women need work that satisfies their creativity and contributes to human society. Today, doing paid work is a necessity because it helps us get through the day wether for our needs or our pleasures. The money earned from work supports

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    The Feminine Mystique is the title of a book written by the late Betty Friedan who also founded The National Organization for Women to help US women gain equal rights. I choose this topic because there has been a lot of media on the feminine moment and how it’s being negatively looked upon so I wanted to learn a little of how it started. She describes the "feminine mystique” she talks about the expectations women had and the box they had to fit in even as young girls, how being an uneducated girl

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    the Feminine Mystique in 1963. It acted as a catalyst that started discussion of the elephant in suburbia’s living rooms. Wives and mothers were fed up with simply being wives and mothers and wanted to do more with their lives. While this may seem like a simple issue with a simple fix such as getting a hobby or extracurricular activity, Friedan present’s this as a multidimensional issue rooted deep within the nation’s history. Friedan presents evidence to assert that the feminine mystique or

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    ‘The Feminine Mystique’, first published in the year of 1963, is widely acknowledged as one of the most influential books in the 20th century as well as in the history of feminism. (Fox, 2006) The book signals the beginning of the second wave of the feminist movement as feminism literature to illustrate and analyse female problems in 1960s America. (Fox, 2006) At the same time, it is a declaration to proclaim an era in which American women strove towards the equality that females refused to be subordinate

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