Woman : the American history of an idea / Lillian Faderman.

What does it mean to be a "woman" in America? Award-winning gender and sexuality scholar Lillian Faderman traces the evolution of the meaning from Puritan ideas of God's plan for women to the sexual revolution of the 1960s and its reversals to the impact of such recent events as #metoo, the appointm...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Faderman, Lillian (Author)
Language:English
Published: New Haven : Yale University Press, [2022]
Subjects:
Genre:
Physical Description:571 pages, 16 unnumbered pages of plates : illustrations ; 25 cm
Format: Book
Contents:
  • Introduction: Tyranny and mutability in the idea of woman
  • Woman in Seventeenth-century America
  • Woman, lady, and not a woman in the eighteenth century
  • Daughters of liberty: woman and a war of independence
  • Woman enters the public sphere: the nineteenth century
  • Nineteenth-century woman leaves home
  • Woman goes to college and enters the professions
  • The struggle to transform woman into citizen
  • The "New Woman" and "new women" in a new century
  • "It's sex o'clock in America"
  • Woman on a seesaw: the Depression and World War II
  • Sending her back to the place where God had set her: woman in the 1950s
  • A new "new woman" emerges (carrying baggage): the 1960s
  • Radical women and the radical woman
  • How sex spawned a new "woman": the 1990s
  • "Woman" in a new millennium
  • Epilogue: the end of "woman"?