What Others Said . . .


Poems and Ads
 
Housewife 
by: Anne Sexton 

Some women marry houses
It's another kind of skin; it has a heart,
a mouth, a liver and bowel movements.
The walls are permanent and pink.

See how she sits on her knees all day
faithfully washing herself down
Men enter by force, drawn back like Jonah
into their fleshy mothers.
A women is her mother.
That's the main thing.

Playboy ad satirizing a housewife's job:

Tired of the Rat Race?
 Fed up with Job Routine?
Well, then . . how would you like
to make $8,000, $20,000--
(as much as $50,000 and more)--
working at home in your Spare Time?
No selling!  No commuting!
No time clocks to punch!
BE YOUR OWN BOSS!!!

Yes, an Assured Lifetime Income can be yours (now),
in an easy, low-pressure, part-time job that will allow
you to spend most of each and every day as you please

TV families, like the Stones from The Donna Reed Show, helped idealize the stay-at home mom.

Working Women and Sexual Gratification

"Work that entices women out of their homes and provides them with prestige only at the price of feminine relinquishment, involves a response to masculine strivings.  The more importance outside work assumes, the more are the masculine components of the woman's nature enhanced and encouraged.  In her home and in her relationship to her children, it is imperative that these strivings be at a minimum and that her femininity be available both for her own satisfaction and for the satisfaction of her children and husband.  She is, therefore, in the dangerous position of having to live one part of her life on the masculine level, another on the feminine.  It is hardly astonishing that few can do so with success.  One of these tendencies must of necessity achieve dominance over the other.  The plain fact is that increasingly we are observing the masculinization of women and with it enormously dangerous consequences to the home, the children (if any) dependent on it, and to the ability of the woman, as well as her husband to obtain sexual gratification."
Ferdinand Lundberg and Marynia F. Farnham from Modern Woman: The Lost Sex

"The psychosocial rule that takes form, then, is this:  the more educated a woman is, the greater chance there is of sexual disorder, more or less severe.  The greater the disordered sexuality in a given group of women, the fewer children they have"
Ferdinand Lundberg and Marynia Farnham from  Modern Woman:  The Lost Sex

Frustration and Depression for the Ex-Working, Educated Housewife

In a speech addressed to a group of college women graduates, Adlai Stevenson said:

"many women feel frustrated and far apart from the great issues and stirring debates for which their education has given them understanding and relish.  Once they read Baudelaire.  Now it is the Consumer's Guide.  Once they wrote poetry.  Now it's the laundry list.  Once they discussed art and philosophy until late in the night.  Now they are so tired they fall asleep as soon as the dishes are finished. There is, often, a sense of contraction of closing horizons and lost opportunities.  They had hoped to play their part in the crisis of the age.  But what they do is wash the diapers."
Adlai Stevenson's Commencement Address at Smith College, June 6, 1955

"It was a strange stirring, a sense of dissatisfaction, a yearning that women suffered in the middle of the 20th century in the United States.  Each suburban wife struggled with it alone.  As she made the beds, shopped for groceries, matched slip cover materials, ate peanut butter sandwiches with her children, chauffeured Cub Scouts and Brownies, lay beside her husband at night, she was afraid to ask of herself the silent question -- 'Is this all?'"
Betty Friedan, The Feminine Mystique

"If there is such a thing as a 'suburban syndrome,' it might take this form: the wife, having worked before marriage or at least having been educated and socially conditioned toward the idea that work (preferably some kind of intellectual work in an office, among men) carries prestige, may get depressed being 'just a housewife."  Even if she avoids that "her humiliation still seeks an outlet.  This may take various forms: in destructive gossip about other women, in raising hell at the PTA, in becoming a dominating mother . . . In her disgruntlement, she can work as much damage to the lives of her husband and children (and her own life) as if she were a career woman, and indeed sometimes more."
December 1956 article in Life, "Changing Roles in Modern Marriage"


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