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Feminism

Second Nature

by Helen Marshall
July 2001, no. 232

Wifework: What marriage really means for women by Susan Maushart

Text, $27.50 pb, 269 pp

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Wifework is a good term for the things that women have been doing in Western marriages for centuries. It evokes all those other phrases coined in the 1970s and 1980s by feminists that resonate in the consciousness of modern women (including many of those who preface any discussion of family life with the mantra ‘I’m not a feminist’). Wifework embraces the sacrifice of ‘the burnt chop syndrome’, the exhaustion of the ‘the double shift’ and the psychological burden of ‘emotional labour’. The title of this new book raises hopes for a spirited discussion examining and updating earlier complaints, showing how things have changed and suggesting what needs to be done about marriages in the new century. As a been-there-done-that reader (married in the 1970s and feeling guilty about letting down feminism by doing so, divorced in the 1980s and feeling guilty about that, cohabiting and parenting in the 1990s), I was interested at once.

 


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Wifework: What marriage really means for women by Susan Maushart

Text, $27.50 pb, 269 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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