Reviews

The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan

sreyasreya's review

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3.0

If somebody asked you to show them the prime example of white and sectional feminism show them this book. The statistics and analogies to Freud were good and very interesting and in the introduction Friedan agreed that the book was very narrow-minded but it felt as if sometimes she blamed the the middle-class house wife demographic going backwards on the Civil Rights Movement or the Anti-War movement, with the idea that every other activist organization was against economically stable and middle class women's rights. Also the way Friedman talks about homosexuality is actually appalling, Friedman discussing how gay men are weak just shows how she believed that other activist organizations were a threat to what she wanted and what she believed. The book is okay and basic read into the feminist cannon, and gives an average view into the middle and upper-middle class women's struggles in the post war years.

kennnedyexe's review

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2.0

pretty painful to read tbh. the feminine mystique is so deeply entrenched in the capitalist pretense, elitist and classist dogma, it's not even aware of these facts of its existence. there have been many wonderful, very well written critiques by much more eloquent intersectional feminists, so i wont try to do that here. while she may have helped to bring feminism to the white upper middle class, this perspective is equipped with some well-fastened blinders. it has long not sat well with me to affix in the "essential feminist" canon. best suited for an exercise in critical analysis or dialectics--- certainly not for new minds that struggle to dissect a "sympathetic" text.

merchantivory's review

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lay beside her husband at night—she was afraid to ask even of herself the silent question—“is this all?”

mercedesm1's review

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4.0

This was a great nonfiction follow up to “Lessons in Chemistry”.

This book provides context not just to the state of feminism, but to American society as a whole, at the time of this being written. Remember the goal of this author: to help women wake themselves up, and claim their identity as a human first and a woman second. Sometimes, weird and hyperbolic comparisons are used (a housewife, to holocaust prisoners, for example) - but don’t let that take away from the big truths she helps shine a light on.

Every one should read this. But, I definitely recommend the audio book vs. reading physically due to the heavy academic language used at certain points in the book.

strea31218's review

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adventurous dark emotional hopeful inspiring sad tense fast-paced

4.0

tasha_sarah's review

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challenging reflective slow-paced

4.0

samvanstokkom's review against another edition

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3.0

(3.5 sterren)
omg ik heb dit boek eindelijk uit. om een of andere reden nam ik telkens dikke pauzes tijdens het lezen van dit boek, ik heb het denk ik echt zeker een half jaar niet aangeraakt voordat ik het net weer oppakte hahaha. maar nu heb ik hem uit! ik heb geen hele uitgesproken mening over dit boek, ook dus omdat ik er niet heel actief mee bezig ben geweest. het was heel interessant om te lezen wat voor immense impact de huisvrouw-'epidemie' op de Amerikaanse samenleving heeft gehad en waarom die 'epidemie' zo uit de hand heeft kunnen lopen. je beseft je heel erg hoe veel er sinds de jaren '50 toch is veranderd mbt de rol van de vrouw in de samenleving, maar ook dat er stiekem toch nog veel hetzelfde gedachtegoed rondgaat. sommige dingen die betty friedan besprak waren gewoon echt bullshit, de manier waarop ze onderzoek deed en tot conclusies kwam was ook niet altijd waterdicht, en soms had ze uitspraken waarvan ik dacht okeee misschien had je dat beter voor jezelf kunnen houden, maar over het algemeen vond ik haar schrijfstijl heel duidelijk en toegankelijk, en was ik het gewoon heel erg eens met waar ze voor stond. dus ja i think this is a pretty valuable read

clix1700's review

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challenging dark informative reflective fast-paced

4.0

mollymadworld's review against another edition

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challenging informative inspiring reflective slow-paced

5.0

I can see why this inspired a revolution. Truly one of the most intelligent, insightful non-fiction books I have ever consumed. Betty Friedann is an icon of feminisim and I can truly say I have learnt a lot and I feel empowered by a woman's writings from 60 years ago!

jjankunas's review

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2.0

This book didn't age well. I was hoping for something more enlightening to help my understanding of feminism and what I got was an incredibly redundant book that was so bold as to compare middle-class housewifery to Nazi concentration camps. I felt like there was a lot of blame placed on the women themselves which left me feeling gross. I give it credit for the impact it had back in the day, but in my opinion this book is no longer relevant.