Gidgets and Women Warriors: Perceptions of Women in the 195s and 196s

Front Cover
Twenty-First Century Books, Jan 1, 2008 - Juvenile Nonfiction - 144 pages
Who was Gidget and who were the Woman Warriors? They weren?t specific individuals, but rather symbols that defined perceptions of women during the 1950s and 1960s. Popular media was doing everything possible to undo the strong, work-oriented Rosie the Riveter image of the 1940s and bring women back into the domestic fold. The young, blonde Gidget image offered young girls a role model for carefree living before they settled down to fulfill their patriotic duty as wives and mothers. Yet many women weren?t buying the media images that advised them on how to catch husbands and become dutiful wives and mothers. Instead, they pursued the Woman Warrior persona to emerge as astronauts, peace activists, and women who challenged bigotry and racism. While their 1940s sisters had asked, ?Who am I? Who do I want to become?? females of the 50s and 60s began to ask, ?Who are we? What will society allow us to become?? Their search for answers to these questions would radically change the American woman's role in society. Learn more about the images and issues that framed perceptions about women in these tumultuous decades.
 

Contents

Authors Note
4
June 1 1950
6
Chapter One The Three As Of Femininity
16
Chapter Two Mrs TV Consumer
42
Chapter Three Teen Scenes
62
Chapter Four Civil Rights And Wrongs
84
Chapter Five Women Warriors Of The Cold War
104
Epilogue A Year Of Protests 1968
128
Source Notes
132
Selected Bibliography
136
Further Reading And Websites
138
Index
140
Back Flap
145
Back Cover
146
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