The problem lay buried, unspoken, for many years in the minds of American
women. It was a strange stirring, a sense of dissatisfaction, a yearning that women
suffered in the middle of the twentieth century in the
For over fifteen years there was no word of this yearning in the millions of
words written about women, for women, in all the columns, books and articles by
experts telling women their role was to seek fulfillment as wives and mothers.
Over and over women heard in voices of tradition and of Freudian sophistication
that they could desire--no greater destiny than to glory in their own
femininity. Experts told them how to catch a man and keep him, how to
breastfeed children and handle their toilet training, how to cope with sibling
rivalry and adolescent rebellion; how to buy a dishwasher, bake bread, cook
gourmet snails, and build a swimming pool with their own hands; how to dress,
look, and act more feminine and make marriage more exciting; how to keep their
husbands from dying young and their sons from growing into delinquents. They
were taught to pity the neurotic, unfeminine, unhappy women who wanted to be
poets or physicists or presidents. They learned that truly feminine women do
not want careers, higher education, political rights--the independence and the
opportunities that the old-fashioned feminists fought for. Some women, in their
forties and fifties, still remembered painfully giving up those dreams, but
most of the younger women no longer even thought about them. A thousand expert
voices applauded their femininity, their adjustment, their new maturity. All
they had to do was devote their lives from earliest girlhood to finding a
husband and bearing children.
By the end of the nineteen-fifties, the average marriage age of women in
Then American girls began getting married in high school. And the women's
magazines, deploring the unhappy statistics about these young marriages, urged
that courses on marriage, and marriage counselors, be installed in the high
schools. Girls started going steady at twelve and thirteen, in junior high.
Manufacturers put out brassieres with false bosoms of foam rubber for little
girls of ten. And on advertisement for a child's dress, sizes 3-6x, in the New York Times in the fall of 1960, said:
"She Too Can Join the Man-Trap Set."
By the end of the fifties, the
In a
Interior decorators were designing kitchens with mosaic murals and original
paintings, for kitchens were once again the center of women's lives. Home
sewing became a million-dollar industry. Many women no longer left their homes,
except to shop, chauffeur their children, or attend a social engagement with
their husbands. Girls were growing up in
the mortgage. Or they were widows supporting families. Fewer and fewer women
were entering professional work. The shortages in the nursing, social work, and
teaching professions caused crises in almost every American city. Concerned
over the
The suburban housewife--she was the dream image of the young American women
and the envy, it was said, of women all over the
world. The American housewife--freed by science and labor-saving appliances
from the drudgery, the dangers of childbirth and the illnesses of her
grandmother. She was healthy, beautiful, educated, concerned only about her
husband, her children, her home. She had found true
feminine fulfillment. As a housewife and mother, she was respected as a full
and equal partner to man in his world. She was free to choose automobiles,
clothes, appliances, supermarkets; she had everything that women ever dreamed
of.
In the fifteen years after World War II, this mystique of feminine
fulfillment became the cherished and self-perpetuating core of contemporary
American culture. Millions of women lived their lives in the image of those
pretty pictures of the American suburban housewife, kissing their husbands
goodbye in front of the picture window, depositing their stationwagonsful
of children at school, and smiling as they ran the new electric waxer over the spotless kitchen floor. They baked their own
bread, sewed their own and their children's clothes, kept their new washing
machines and dryers running all day. They changed the sheets on the beds twice
a week instead of once, took the rughoolag class in
adult education, and pitied their poor frustrated mothers, who had dreamed of
having a career. Their only dream was to be perfect wives and mothers; their
highest ambition to have five children and a beautiful house, their only fight
to get and keep their husbands. They had no thought for the unfeminine problems
of the world outside the home; they wanted the men to make the major decisions.
They gloried in their role as women, and wrote proudly on the census blank:
"Occupation: housewife."
For over fifteen years, the words written for women, and the words women
used when they talked to each other, while their husbands sat on the other side
of the room and talked shop or politics or septic tanks, were about problems
with their children, or how to keep their husbands happy, or improve their
children's school, or cook chicken or make slipcovers. Nobody argued whether
women were inferior or superior to men; they were simply different. Words like
"emancipation" and "career" sounded strange and
embarrassing; no one had used them for years. When a Frenchwoman named Simone
de Beauvoir wrote a book called The Second Sex, an
American critic commented that she obviously "didn't know what life was
all about," and besides, she was talking about French women. The
"woman problem" in
If a woman had a problem in the 1950's and 1960's, she knew that something
must be wrong with her marriage, or with herself. Other women were satisfied
with their lives, she thought. What kind of a woman was she if she did not feel
this mysterious fulfillment waxing the kitchen floor? She was so ashamed to
admit her dissatisfaction that she never knew how many other women shared it.
If she tried to tell her husband, he didn't understand what she was talking
about. She did not really understand it herself.
For over fifteen years women in
[To read the complete Chapter 1 click here.]