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The Paradox of Change - American Women in the 20th Century (Paperback, Revised)
Loot Price: R451
Discovery Miles 4 510
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The Paradox of Change - American Women in the 20th Century (Paperback, Revised)
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Loot Price R451
Discovery Miles 4 510
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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When William Chafe's The American Woman was published in 1972, it
was hailed as a breakthrough in the study of women in this century.
Bella Abzug praised it as "a remarkable job of historical
research," and Alice Kessler-Harris called it "an extraordinarily
useful synthesis of material about 20th-century women." But much
has happened in the last two decades--both in terms of scholarship,
and in the lives of American women. With The Paradox of Change,
Chafe builds on his classic work, taking full account of the events
and scholarship of the last fifteen years, as he extends his
analysis into the 1990s with the rise of feminism and the New
Right.
Chafe conveys all the subtleties of women's paradoxical position
in the United States today, showing how women have gradually
entered more fully into economic and political life, but without
attaining complete social equality or economic justice. Despite the
gains achieved by feminist activists during the 1970s and 1980s,
the tensions continued to abound between public and private roles,
and the gap separating ideals of equal opportunity from the reality
of economic discrimination widened. Women may have gained some new
rights in the last two decades, but the feminization of poverty has
also soared, with women constituting 70% of the adult poor.
Moreover, a resurgence of conservatism, symbolized by the triumph
of Phyllis Schlafly's anti-ERA coalition, has cast in doubt even
some of the new rights of women, such as reproductive freedom.
Chafe captures these complexities and contradictions with a lively
combination of representative anecdotes and archival research, all
backed up by statistical studies. As in The American Woman, Chafe
once again examines "woman's place" throughout the 20th century,
but now with a more nuanced and inclusive approach. There are
insightful portraits of the continuities of women's political
activism from the Progressive era through the New Deal; of the
contradictory gains and losses of the World War II years; and of
the various kinds of feminism that emerged out of the tumult of the
1960s. Not least, there are narratives of all the significant
struggles in which women have engaged during these last ninety
years--for child care, for abortion rights, and for a chance to
have both a family and a career.
The Paradox of Change is a wide-ranging history of 20th-century
women, thoroughly researched and incisively argued. Anyone who
wants to learn more about how women have shaped, and been shaped
by, modern America will have to read this book.
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