ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
U.S. History Videos 374 videos
Ever heard of a "living document"? They eat and breathe just like the rest of us! They even walk around on their own two legs. Okay, fine—maybe t...
If the Puritans had gotten their way, religion would play a much larger role in lawmaking these days. Want to know more? Watch the video for all th...
What happened between the creation of the Articles of Confederation and the ratification of the current U.S. Constitution? This video analyzes the...
Betty Friedan 650 Views
Share It!
Description:
Betty Frieden was one of the leading influences (arguably the starting one) in women's rights. She argued for gender equality everywhere— from the workplace to the home—and argued against conventional norms expected of a wife. This woman meant business in her fight for women... as long as you were white and middle class. Was Betty wise for taking baby steps before pushing for total reform, or was she prejudiced against minorities?
Transcript
- 00:08
Betty Friedan, a la Shmoop.
- 00:10
Pure bliss.
- 00:11
It's what giving up a career...
- 00:14
...obeying your husband...
- 00:17
...and doing all the housework was supposed to mean to American women in the 1950's.
Full Transcript
- 00:24
Sounds like paradise...right?
- 00:27
Betty Friedan didn't think so either.
- 00:29
So she wrote this little book called The Feminine Mystique, which became an instant sensation.
- 00:35
Friedan encouraged women to go after their own professional dreams.
- 00:39
Even wilder, she said that some women could be fulfilled without having a husband or kids.
- 00:48
Really radical stuff.
- 00:50
But you have to remember that it was a different time.
- 00:52
There was no Oprah.
- 00:54
No Hilary Clinton.
- 00:55
No Miss Piggy.
- 00:56
Women were not supposed to have any power.
- 00:59
As James Brown put it,
- 01:00
"This is a Man's World."
- 01:04
Betty's book was a home run.
- 01:07
Three million copies flew off the shelves,..
- 01:09
...and many women realized they were not alone in their dissatisfaction with life.
- 01:15
In 1966...
- 01:16
...Friedan founded NOW, The National Organization for Women...
- 01:20
...which fought for gender equality in the workplace.
- 01:24
By enforcing the 1964 Civil Rights Act, employment discrimination based on gender was made illegal...
- 01:31
It also prohibited the firing of women based on age or marriage.
- 01:36
In many ways, Friedan and NOW gave birth -- if you'll pardon the expression - to the modern
- 01:41
women's rights movement. But not all women were free to join the party.
- 01:46
Friedan focused on middle class white women.
- 01:49
She largely overlooked lesbians, the poor, and non-whites.
- 01:54
So was there enough "ka-pow" in Betty Friedan's NOW?
- 01:57
Should she have embraced all women in her championing of women's rights?
- 02:02
Or did she have to begin her quest for gender equality by taking baby steps,
- 02:07
in order to achieve success?
- 02:11
Shmoop amongst yourselves.
Related Videos
The concept of using a Facebook profile as a personal diary began with Sylvia Plath. Sorry, Martha, but we really don't need to know that you had o...
Ready for your quiz on wind turbines and solar cells? For all of you who have been studying up on how to use vegetable oil as an energy source over...
Ever wonder how all of your iPhones, Kindles, Xboxes, and laptops get their power? No? Well we are going to tell you anyway, sassy pants.
GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
Everything you ever needed to know about the Red Scare. Well, as much as would fit in one video, at least.