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Featured Author: Betty Friedan

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Featured Author: Betty Friedan

With News and Reviews From the Archives of The New York Times


In This Feature

  • Reviews of Betty Friedan’s Books
  • Articles by Betty Friedan
  • Articles About Betty Friedan

    Related Links

  • Judith Shulevitch Reviews Judith Hennessee’s ‘Betty Friedan’ and Daniel Horowitz’s ‘Betty Friedan And the Making of “The Feminine Mystique”‘ (May 9, 1999)
  • First Chapter: ‘Betty Friedan. And the Making of “The Feminine Mystique”‘


    The Associated Press
    Betty Friedan, after receiving a Lifetime Achievment Award for Literary Arts from the Academy of the Arts in New York, Tuesday, Dec. 1, 1998.



    REVIEWS OF BETTY FRIEDAN’S BOOKS:

  • The Feminine Mystique
    (1963)
    “. . . [a] highly readable, provocative book. . . . Sweeping generalities, in which this book necessarily abounds, may hold a certain amount of truth but often obscure the deeper issues. . . . To paraphrase
    a famous line, ‘The fault, dear Mrs. Friedan, is not in our culture, but in ourselves.'”

  • It Changed My Life
    (1976)
    “. . . she has raised politically sensational questions that she must know will not go unnoticed, and she has failed to spell out or document her answers.”

  • The Second Stage
    (1981)
    “. . . it seems premature to identify a second stage in a social movement when the original goals of the ‘first stage’ of the movement are still disputed and largely unrealized. . . . The underlying
    theme of this book — and it is a valid message — is that both men and women need to be free to discover their own ‘personhood.'”

  • The Fountain of Age
    (1993)
    “‘The Fountain of Age’ chanced to reach my desk on my 50th birthday, and I can’t imagine a more heartening gift for a woman of any age, certain or otherwise. Or a man, for that matter.”


    ARTICLES ABOUT BETTY FRIEDAN:

  • Women ‘Educated’ Out of Careers
    (March 6, 1963)
    This article examines one of the charges in “The Feminine Mystique,” that even college-educated women were discouraged from pursuing challenging careers.

  • Back Home to Peoria — and a Sequel to ‘Feminine Mystique’
    (May 21, 1976)
    Friedan discusses the state of the women’s movement on the occasion of her first extended return visit to the town where she grew up.

  • Home Beat
    (June 15, 1978)
    Friedan explains why, in the midst of campaigning for the E.R.A., she agreed to appear in an endorsement for Wamsutta sheets.

  • NOW Convocation on ‘New Leadership’
    (April 1, 1981)
    In an address, Friedan called for a coalition of interests of “not women alone, and certainly not women against men,” in working for the larger interests of the country, “and doing what
    we did for ourselves 20 years ago.”

  • Betty Friedan Ushers in a ‘Second Stage’
    (October 19, 1981)
    In this interview, Friedan talks about the critical reaction from some feminists to her arguments in “The Second Stage.”

  • Betty Friedan Defies Britons, Wins Debate
    (April 25, 1983)
    Friedan won over a hostile crowd at Cambridge University gathered for a formal debate on the legacy of feminism.

  • For Friedan, a Life on the Run
    (May 26, 1985)
    In this interview, Friedan talks about her participation in Forum, a nongovernmental women’s conference to be held in conjunction with a United Nations-sponsored women’s conference.

  • Friedan and Group Seeking a ‘New National Strategy’
    (August 9, 1987)
    Friedan joined with several other writers and members of the intellectual community of Sag Harbor, who banded together under the name Sag Harbor Initiative, to organize three days of discussions on
    social, political and economic problems.

  • Trying to Dispel ‘The Mystique of Age,’ at 72
    (September 15, 1993)
    In this interview, Friedan says “It isn’t that I have stopped being a feminist, but women as a special separate interest group are not my concern anymore.”


    ARTICLES BY BETTY FRIEDAN:

  • Cooking With Betty Friedan . . . Yes, Betty Friedan
    (January 5, 1977)
    In this essay, Friedan writes, “We women had to liberate ourselves from the slavish necessities, the excessive drudgery and guilt related to cooking in order to be able to now liberate ourselves
    from an excessive need to react against it.”

  • Feminism’s Next Step
    (July 5, 1981)
    In this adaptation from her book, “The Second Stage,” Friedan writes that the women’s movement has “reached, not the beginning of the end, but the end of the beginning.”

  • Twenty Years After ‘The Feminine Mystique’
    (February 27, 1983)
    In this article for The New York Times Magazine, Friedan says that the problem described in “The Feminine Mystique” has been transcended, but that there are new challenges for the women’s
    movement.

  • No Hype. Issues, Please.
    (April 9, 1984)
    Friedan argues that the issues women voters care about were not being addressed by the media or the presidential campaigns they were covering.

  • Women in the Firing Line
    (October 28, 1984)
    Recounting her experiences in the U.S. and the Middle East, Friedan examines the reaction to the women’s movement.

  • How to Get the Women’s Movement Moving Again
    (November 3, 1985)
    In this analysis of the women’s movement, Friedan writes, “The promise of that empowerment of women that enabled so many of us to change our own lives is being betrayed by our failure to
    mobilize the next generation to move beyond us.”

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