The Feminine Mystique
Betty Friedan's book - calling for women to leave the home and enter the workplace - paved the way for the women's liberation movement.
In 1963, a frustrated American housewife, Betty Friedan, published one of the key texts in feminist thought. With its call for women to leave the home and enter the workplace, The Feminine Mystique paved the way for the women's liberation movement and became a bestseller. It called for a shakeup of the job market with maternity pay and subsidised childcare. Jo Fidgen speaks to two of Betty Friedan's children, Johnathan and Emily. The programme also contains archive recordings of Friedan herself.
Photo: The Schlesinger Library, Radcliffe Institute, Harvard University.
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- Tue 19 Feb 201309:50GMTBBC World Service Online
- Tue 19 Feb 201312:50GMTBBC World Service Online
- Tue 19 Feb 201320:50GMTBBC World Service Online
- Tue 19 Feb 201323:50GMTBBC World Service Online
- Wed 20 Feb 201303:50GMTBBC World Service Online
- Sun 24 Feb 201313:50GMTBBC World Service Online
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