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An Intersectional Analysis Of 'The Feminine Mystique'

Decent Essays

An Intersectional Analysis of “The Feminine Mystique” When it was first published in 1963, Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique was very popular among women in the 1960s, and the ideas presented in the book were extremely influential to second wave, liberal feminism. In The Feminine Mystique, Friedan discusses what she believes to be the myth of the happy, suburban housewife. She also addresses the societal pressure for women to be feminine above all else, and gives examples as to why this pressure is harmful. She highlights the ways in which women are taught by society that being a wife and mother will make them happier than having a career. When educated women give up careers and other ambitions to become a stay-at-home mother, many find …show more content…

She gives examples of the negative effects of the emphasis on conforming to these standards, such as women refusing medical treatment out of fear of the medicine making them unfeminine, women eating chalk in order to lose weight, and young girls wearing bras with padding made to look like breasts. She shows through these examples that beauty standards are damaging to young women and girls. However, she fails to mention that these standards of beauty and femininity are often racist as well. The standards of attractiveness for women are often Eurocentric; European or “white” features are considered more beautiful than any others. Light skin, blonde hair, blue eyes, and small “button” noses are all examples of attractive, “feminine” traits that are more commonly found in white women. This makes standards of femininity even more harmful to women of color, who learn from an early age that they have to look white if they want to attain beauty and femininity. This is an important distinction that Friedan does not address, likely because she is only addressing white women and their relationship to

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