Status Updates From The Problem That Has No Name
The Problem That Has No Name by
Status Updates Showing 1-30 of 444
Paula Mota
is on page 51 of 55
Did women really go home again as a reaction to feminism?The fact is that to women born after 1920, feminism was dead history. It ended as a vital movement in America with the winning of that final right: vote. In the 1930s and 1940s the sort of woman who fought for woman's rights was still concerned with human rights and freedom -for Negroes, for oppressed workers, for victims of Franco's Spain and Hitler's Germany.
— Sep 01, 2025 12:26AM
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Paula Mota
is on page 34 of 55
"The women and men who started that revolution anticipated 'no small amount of misconception, misinterpretation and ridicule.' And they got it. The 1st to speak out in public for women's rights in America- Fanny W, daughter of a Scotch nobleman and Ernestine R., daughter of a rabbi - were called "red harlot of infidelity' and 'woman a 1000 times below a prostitute'.
— Aug 28, 2025 11:04AM
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Paula Mota
is on page 30 of 55
Did women want these freedoms because they wanted to be men?Or did they want them because they also were human? That this is what feminism is all about was seen symbolically by Henrik Ibsen. When he said in the play 'A Doll's House", in 1879, that a woman was simply a human being, he struck a new note in literature. Thousands of women in middle-class Europe and America, in that Victorian time, saw themselves in Nora.
— Aug 27, 2025 06:48AM
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Paula Mota
is on page 23 of 55
"Is she trapped simply trapped by the enormous demands of her role as modern housewife: wife, mistress, mother, nurse, consumer, cook, chauffeur, expert on interior decoration, child care, appliance repair, furniture refinishing, nutrition and education? Her day is fragmented, she can never spend more than 15 minutes on any one thing; she has no time to read books, only magazines."
— Aug 26, 2025 07:13AM
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Paula Mota
is on page 11 of 55
When a French woman named Simone de Beauvoir wrote a book called 'The Second Sex', an American critic commented that she obviously 'didn't know what life was all about'. The 'woman problem' in America no longer existed. (...) What kind of a woman was she if she did not feel this fulfilment waxing the kitchen floor?
— Aug 25, 2025 08:56AM
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Paula Mota
is on page 4 of 55
Department-store buyers reported that American women since 1939, had become three and four sizes smaller. "Women are out to fit the clothes, instead of vice versa", one buyer said.
— Aug 25, 2025 06:40AM
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Joana
is on page 21 of 55
I find it interesting that some of the things that were being sad then about the way children were being raised, it’s something you still hear a lot today…
— May 14, 2025 05:25PM
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Joana
is on page 13 of 55
I knew of the post-war reality for women, but I had no idea that the number of women in university had dropped from 1920!!! Also people thinking the solution is taking away the right to vote makes me mad!!!
— May 14, 2025 11:10AM
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