![]() "We don't write with that kind of anger and rage anymore," Rosin says. ![]() ![]() Now, they were all being told to stay home and find their fulfillment in taking care of their husbands and children. A lot of women had worked outside the home during the war, and a significant number of women had gotten a college education. The suburbs were growing exponentially and the economy was booming. "There's very seldom that you get a book that is so of the moment," says New York Times columnist Gail Collins, who was a teenager when the book first came out. It's probably hard for them to understand the way things were when Friedan decided she had enough. ![]() Even so, when we talked with some young women in downtown Washington, D.C., many knew little or nothing about it.īut today's young woman can be forgiven for not feeling the urgency to read The Feminine Mystique that their mothers might have felt. These days, many people read it in college - often in women's studies classes. Since its first publication in 1963, millions of people have read The Feminine Mystique. The problem was "The Feminine Mystique," which was also the title of her groundbreaking book, published 50 years ago. In 1963, Betty Friedan called it "the problem that has no name" and then proceeded to name it - and the name stuck. ![]() Your purchase helps support NPR programming. Close overlay Buy Featured Book Title The Feminine Mystique Author Betty Friedan ![]()
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