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  1. The Feminine Mystique is a book by American author Betty Friedan, widely credited with sparking second-wave feminism in the United States. First published by W. W. Norton on February 19, 1963, The Feminine Mystique became a bestseller, initially selling over a million copies. Friedan used the book to challenge the widely shared belief that "fulfillment as a woman had only one definition for ...

  2. The Feminine Mystique, a landmark book by feminist Betty Friedan published in 1963 that described the pervasive dissatisfaction among women in mainstream American society in the post-World War II period. She coined the term feminine mystique to describe the societal assumption that women could find fulfillment through housework, marriage, sexual passivity, and child rearing alone.

  3. Feb 4, 2021 · A copy of Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique was gifted to the National Museum of American History and exhibited in a 2015 exhibition "The Early Sixties: American Culture." NMAH, gift of ...

  4. Friedan begins her study of the lives of presumably white, middle-class women in suburban postwar America through her exploration of the problem that has no name.Friedan first recognized the problem during a visit to her alma mater, Smith College, when she conducted an informal survey among fellow alumnae who reported discontent with their post-graduate lives.

  5. The Feminine Mystique is a sociological study written in the subjective voice that characterized New Journalism—a type of non-fiction writing in which authors included their own voices or made themselves a part of the experience about which they were writing. New Journalism did not merely convey facts, as traditional journalism did, it also included the author’s interpretation of and ...

  6. The Feminine Mystique Summary. B etty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique is a non-fiction work that illuminates the plight of American women during the mid-nineteenth century.. Through interviews ...

  7. The Feminine Mystique’s first chapter explains that while many women might think they are alone in experiencing feelings of emptiness, boredom, and incompleteness, they are mistaken.The problem, Friedan says, is “the feminine mystique”: an ideology in mid-century America that holds that women’s foremost value and responsibility lie in their femininity.

  8. Mar 1, 2010 · The book that changed the consciousness of a country—and the world.Landmark, groundbreaking, classic—these adjectives barely describe the earthshaking and long-lasting effects of Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique. This is the book that defined "the problem that has no name," that launched the Second Wave of the feminist movement, and has been awakening women and men with its insights ...

  9. In The Feminine Mystique, Betty Friedan, a freelance writer and 1942 Smith graduate, intertwines anecdotes and observations from her own life with facts and analysis from her research, creating a ...

  10. When W.W. Norton published Betty Friedan’s The Feminine Mystique in February 1963, it printed just 3,000 copies. This small figure proved grossly inadequate as sales quickly exceeded the million mark, helping to spark a mass movement that transformed women’s legal status.Friedan’s book encouraged women to break free of what she called “the feminine mystique,” a concept insisting that ...

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