Review by Choice Review
While Betty Friedan's name and contributions to modern feminism are familiar to many, Shteir (theatre studies, DePaul Univ.) provides new insights that are well worth reading. In addition to chronicling Friedan's myriad accomplishments, such as penning The Feminine Mystique (1963) and helping to create the National Organization for Women, this book uses new interviews and recently opened archival collections to interrogate her uneasy (and sometimes contentious) relationships with other feminists and social movement contemporaries, such as labor leaders, civil rights organizers, and women's liberationists. Clearly a force to be reckoned with, Friedan was also someone who could be polarizing and was, as Shteir describes, someone who "would be cancelled today" (p. 276). Also impressive is how this book extends the conventional narrative of Friedan's life, emphasizing not only her coming of age, early work as a journalist, and her role in reigniting feminism in the 1960s, but also the disputes in which she found herself embroiled in the 1970s and her efforts at reinvention in the 1980s. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers. --Laura Micheletti Puaca, Christopher Newport University
Copyright American Library Association, used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Historian Shteir (The Steal) highlights Betty Friedan's complex legacy as a tireless and mercurial crusader for feminism in this warts-and-all biography. In 1963, Friedan channeled her unhappy experiences as a daughter and wife into The Feminine Mystique, in which she described the "numbing gendered division of labor at home." The book's success helped transform Friedan from a left-wing print journalist into a popular--if controversial--speaker and a cofounder of the National Organization for Women (NOW). At the second NOW Congress in 1969, Friedan clashed with lesbian activists, calling them the "lavender menace" and attempting to distance NOW from their cause. Delving into Friedan's reasoning, Shteir concludes that a combination of Midwestern prudishness, paranoia (Friedan "contended that the lesbians were CIA plants"), and left-leaning economic theories convinced her that material gains like wage equality, free abortion, and free childcare were paramount for women's liberation, while "sexual politics" spearheaded by lesbian intellectuals like Kate Millet were a dangerous distraction. Shteir's comprehensive research includes interviews with Millett and other second-wave feminists, and illuminating deep dives into archives recently made public. The result is a lucid portrait of Friedan as a bold yet flawed advocate for women's equality. (Sept.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
The tumultuous life of a tireless activist for women's rights. A drama critic and cultural historian, Shteir offers a corrective to negative images of noted feminist Betty Friedan (1921-2006) that accuse her of classism, racism, and homophobia. Drawing on more than 100 interviews, newly available archival sources, and private papers, Shtier provides a more nuanced perspective, portraying her as an idealistic, determined, and complex woman whose explosive temper and anger permeated personal and professional relationships. The eldest daughter in an upper-middle-class family of Reform Jews, she was a sickly, intellectually precocious child prone to rages. At 14, the "short, pudgy bibliophile" began high school, where she became drawn to theater. "Acting," Shteir writes, "gave her a sense of how she could move audiences as well as craft an identity." Accepted to many top colleges, she decided on Smith, where she excelled, becoming editor-in-chief of the Smith College Associated News. She was inspired further to pursue journalism after attending the Highlander Folk School, in Tennessee, which offered workshops on writing about labor and union issues. Shteir recounts Friedan's many love affairs, her work as a reporter for the Federated Press news agency in New York, her estrangement from her family, and her encounters with antisemitism. In 1947, she married Carl Friedan, a theater producer; by 1956, they had three children, and in 1969, they divorced. In 1963, The Feminine Mystique, a book that "universalized female unhappiness," catapulted Friedan to international fame. Shteir describes Friedan's role in the founding of the National Organization of Women; her ongoing disputes with other members of the group as well as with noted feminists; and her unwavering support of abortion rights and the passage of the Equal Rights Amendment. Her second book, the essay collection It Changed My Life, revealed her as both a visionary and a "paranoid braggart slaying radical enemies." An evenhanded biography of a pugnacious revolutionary. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.