I saw the devotion in Hannah’s eyes as she washed her hands or cleaned the dishes, following rituals that our people had kept for so many generations…women formed the filament of continuity, and my soul spun itself out on that holy thread.”
-from Song of the Magdalene, by Donna Jo Napoli
When, throughout the tumultuous course of the women's movement, did marriage become a scorned choice, and independence so praised? I was reading What Our Mothers Didn't Tell Us, by Danielle Crittenden, today, and it struck me that this society we live in now is abnormal. Crittenden writes, "Even religious conservatives, who disapprove of sex outside of marriage, accept the now-common wisdom that it is better to put off marriage than do it too early." (60) Why??? I kept asking myself as I read. And that's really the topic of this post- no insight to offer, just discussion to encourage. Why has such a negative view of one of the greatest goods on earth-marriage and family, a home, love- prevailed? We must reclaim a positive view of marriage and family, not just for women, but for everyone. Sure, that's great if Miss So-and-So wants to be a doctor, or a lawyer, or a journalist, and put off marriage...but those who chose to marry shouldn't be scorned by society for doing so!
Crittenden writes, "A twenty-year-old bride is considered as pitiable as a thirty-year-old spinster used to be." (60) I saw this disdain first-hand at the wedding I attended the past weekend. One of the women who worked at the hotel, as she was seating the (mostly college age) bridal party, said, "Men sit on this side- or perhaps I should say boys?" It was not amusing- I found it offensive, and perhaps it was offensive to the bride and groom and to the many other college students attending, as well.
Crittenden points out that women have not, for the most part, benefited from this new arrangement of delayed marriage and childbearing and casual sex- men have. Obviously. As women get older, men their age aren't interested anymore, they're focused on the younger women. And, biologically speaking, a man can have a child indefinitely. Women cannot; "I often think that moderately attractive bachelors in their thirties now possess the sexual power that once belonged only to models and millionaires. They have their pick of companions, and may callously disregard the increasingly desperate thirtyish single women around them or move on when their current love becomes too cloying. As for the single woman over thirty, she may be in every other aspect of her life a paragon of female achievement; but in her romantic life, she must force herself to be as eager to please and accommodate male desire as any 1920s cotillion debutante." (68)
When did marriage become such a dirty word?
“Maybe our grandmothers weren't as stupid as we thought. The family, volunteer work, religion, shaping the hearts and minds of the next generation-maybe all that can't be reduced to just 'shining floors and wiping noses.’” -Myriam Miedzian, describing the lives of mothers who don’t have careers, in Wendy Shalit's A Return to Modesty, page 216.
Showing posts with label womanhood. Show all posts
Showing posts with label womanhood. Show all posts
Wednesday, October 17, 2007
Thursday, October 11, 2007
"Glory to women! They weave and entwine...
... heavenly roses into an earthly life.”
-Friedrich Schiller
Wendy Shalit's Girls Gone Mild is Generation Y's counter-cultural answer to The Feminine Mystique, written by Betty Friedan. In this setting alone, the library's sole copy is eagerly snatched up and passed around from girl to girl, inspiring fervent discussions over what it means to live as a woman today. Passages are quoted, read aloud, cited in conversation; ideas are disseminated. For a generation of women reared in a time so accusatory of and derogatory toward traditional womanhood, Shalit's words bring hope and inspiration, and a new feeling of solidarity with a sisterhood most of us didn't even know existed. And by "traditional womanhood", at least how I have understood it from Shalit's books, is meant women who are vibrantly proud to be women; who delight in God-given gender differences; who eagerly embrace, or wish to embrace, the roles of wife and mother; who would rather cultivate their minds, souls, relationships, and faith than cultivate miles of exposed, flawless flesh.
Girls Gone Mild is, in the opinion of this humble blogger, a generational milestone.
“Every woman shares in Mary's sublime dignity.”
-Pope John Paul II
-Friedrich Schiller
Wendy Shalit's Girls Gone Mild is Generation Y's counter-cultural answer to The Feminine Mystique, written by Betty Friedan. In this setting alone, the library's sole copy is eagerly snatched up and passed around from girl to girl, inspiring fervent discussions over what it means to live as a woman today. Passages are quoted, read aloud, cited in conversation; ideas are disseminated. For a generation of women reared in a time so accusatory of and derogatory toward traditional womanhood, Shalit's words bring hope and inspiration, and a new feeling of solidarity with a sisterhood most of us didn't even know existed. And by "traditional womanhood", at least how I have understood it from Shalit's books, is meant women who are vibrantly proud to be women; who delight in God-given gender differences; who eagerly embrace, or wish to embrace, the roles of wife and mother; who would rather cultivate their minds, souls, relationships, and faith than cultivate miles of exposed, flawless flesh.
Girls Gone Mild is, in the opinion of this humble blogger, a generational milestone.
“Every woman shares in Mary's sublime dignity.”
-Pope John Paul II
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