Search Results
-
FILTER BY DATEAll Time
-
-
FILTER BY RELEVANCEMost Relevant
-
-
FILTER BY CONTENT TYPEAll Content Types
-
Antipathy towards stay-at-home mothers goes back to the early days of modern feminism.
Betty Friedan's fatal mistakewas attackingthe domestic sphere itself--along with all the women who chose to live there.
Harvey C. Mansfield, professor of government at Harvard University, delivered the second of AEI's 1997-1998 Bradley Lectures on October 14, 1997.
The "problem that has no name," as described by Betty Friedan, no longer exists.
CEDAW contains many worthy and indeed noble declarations, but its key provisions are 1970s feminism preserved in diplomatic amber. Releasing those aged provisions in 21st-century America would be strange at best, and at worst they could seriously compromise the privacy, well-being, and basic freedoms of Americans.
Harvey Mansfield's Bradley Lecture.
Feminist criticism of literature tears down the accumulated wisdom of generations and assaults all that makes a literary imagination possible.




