The Radical Future of Liberal Feminism |
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Page 36
... domestic life reflected the new needs of bourgeois marriage as well as the old needs of patriarchy . According to Powell's study , English Domestic Relations , few books were written for the instruction of women alone in domestic ...
... domestic life reflected the new needs of bourgeois marriage as well as the old needs of patriarchy . According to Powell's study , English Domestic Relations , few books were written for the instruction of women alone in domestic ...
Page 96
... domestic industry and now was increas- ingly becoming an economic dependent . The work that had been in the home and had been woman's was gradually being removed from the home and taken from her . The distinction between public and ...
... domestic industry and now was increas- ingly becoming an economic dependent . The work that had been in the home and had been woman's was gradually being removed from the home and taken from her . The distinction between public and ...
Page 211
... domestic labor within the family . In addition to employing women in a manner that increases the profit system for individual corporations , the sexual division of labor maintains a system of domestic labor within the home that reflects ...
... domestic labor within the family . In addition to employing women in a manner that increases the profit system for individual corporations , the sexual division of labor maintains a system of domestic labor within the home that reflects ...
Contents
PART | 23 |
THE HISTORICAL ORIGINS OF LIBERAL | 31 |
The Feminist Embrace | 89 |
Copyright | |
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abortion analysis argue bourgeois bourgeois society capitalism citizen conception conflict consciousness contradictions defined discussion domestic economic class economic dependence Elizabeth Cady Stanton Emile Enfranchisement equality of opportunity exist father female feminine mystique feminist politics feminist theory feudal freedom Friedan husband Ibid ideology of liberal independence indi inequality J. S. Mill Jean Jacques Rousseau John Stuart Mill labor force liberal feminism liberal feminist liberal ideology liberal individualism Locke male marriage married women Mary Wollstonecraft middle-class woman Mill and Taylor mother motherhood nature needs patri patriarchal patriarchal ideology percent private property privilege problem public and private radical feminist rational realm recognize Redstockings reflects reform relations reproductive Revolution Rights of Woman role Rousseau rule sex-class sexual class social Socialist Feminism sphere structure struggle tion understand University Press vidualism wife Wollstonecraft woman's equality woman's oppression woman's right women's lives York