we read this one in my feminist book club, & i think it probably earned two & a half stars from me. when will goodreads get with the program & start offering half-stars?
i really wanted to like this book! i was even prepared to shell out & pay full-price for it new, but the independent bookstore in my town didn't have any copies & couldn't get a copy to me before my book club meeting. a word to the wise for those of you who live in towns with well-stocked independent bookstores: never take that for granted. although i routinely sang the praises of the harvard bookstore when i lived in boston & spent hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars there over the course of eight years, i am now feeling like i didn't cherish it enough.
because i couldn't get a hard copy in time for my meeting & the public library copy (copies?) was (were?) checked out, i had to settle for an ebook. this may have influenced my perspective on the book. i have even gone so far as to read e-versions of books i've already read as actual books, & i did not like them as much in the e-version. i don't have an ereader, so i have to read ebooks on my computer. even with the screen light turned down, it makes my eyes tired, the interface is clunky, & i find myself racing to finish the book just so i can end the torture of reading on an electronic device.
the actual text of this book is skimpy--only about 180 pages. it's not a biography of friedan, who wrote the feminine mystique so much as it is a mash-up of a social history examining the influence of the feminine mystique & a sociological overview of women's rights fifty years later. if you have ever read any inter-disciplinary-ish sociological non-fiction, especially that published by an academic press, you will be familiar with the way that these books always start with a really detailed introduction that functions as a kind of annotated table of contents. pretty much all the talking points the book is going to focus on are summarized briefly in the intro. well, a strange stirring basically read as a 180-page introduction. i kept waiting to get to the meat & potatoes part of the book, the part that would can it with the endless statistics & survey results for two seconds & really get into some nitty gritty stories about how the feminine mystique influenced its readers, or how it was marketed, or how it shaped a second wave feminist legacy that is relevant to women today. but it was just a ceaseless parade of facts, figures, percentages, survey results, & rehashing of other scholars' research. the whole thing felt a little bit sloppy & lot derivative. about halfway through the book, i found myself thinking, "this is a book about a book, & the author has failed to make any compelling argument about why in the fuck i should care about the feminine mystique." i mean, that is kind of an oversight.
even though the other women in my book club had been excited to read this book, we kept it on our agenda for three weeks & never managed to talk about it even once. all three of our meetings were just gossip sessions. which says a lot more about the book than us. it just didn't compel us or inspire us at all. even our few attempts to relate our gossip topics to something in the book were belabored & shallow.
& today, i read an article in the "new york times" written by stephanie coontz, about educated women & marriage. her argument was basically that women are now earning more than half of all advanced degrees in the united states, & by the time an educated women is 35-40, she is just as likely to have been married than her less educated counterparts. um...fascinating? there were lots tawdry details about how men that are less educated than their wives experience more erectile dysfunction, which coontz suggests is a function of a man feeling inferior to his wife. it was like the feminist version of yellow journalism. i don't know. it just felt like a throwback to 1992 or something, like the next article was going to be about gennifer flowers. i guess that if you are really pining for feminist scholarship that has not progressed beyond the clinton administration, this might be just the book you are looking for, but the rest of us are a little disappointed.