1st Edition

Womankind Beyond the Stereotypes

By Nancy Reeves Copyright 1982
    201 Pages
    by Routledge

    202 Pages
    by Routledge

    A stereotype can be defined as a rendering by consensus. Since WOMANKIND: BEYOND THE STEREOTYPES first appeared in 1971, a turbulent decade has passed. In launching a new edition after such an interval, it seems appropriate to ask how far society has moved: be-yond the stereotypes. Such motion is a critical gauge of the status of women, for the power to define can also be the power to destroy; as long as the second sex is culturally prepackaged, its biographical destiny will be preprogrammed and perilous. Looking backward then to 1971, it is clear that the liberation movement has affected consciousness; it has even subverted received doctrine. On the other hand, the stereotypes have not disappeared; they have simply gone underground. At the explicit level, one can point to new patterns; at the implicit level, traditional definitions persist, and continue to be both determinative and destructive.

    Actualizing the architecture of this book, I set out to examine fixed positions related to a) stereotypes of role, and b) assumptions of thought. In this edition, I have added a section called "Interpenetrations," where I undertake to analyze, in terms of current metamorphosis, what has hap-pened in the private and in the public spheres. The chapter entitled, "Sex and Gender," deals with the characteristic interweaving of present im-peratives and past prototypes, in relation to biography. The chapter en-titled, "The Politics of Power," deals with the same characteristic inter-weaving, in relation to history. In a transitional period, transformation proceeds unevenly: old and new are a continuing part of contemporary reality. In sum, I have attempted to harmonize what is unprecedented with what is familiar, and to dissect meaningful strands from the tangle of paradoxical precepts. Embarking on such venturesome thought, I have been mindful of the caveat of Jacob Bronowski: "If today we want to find relief from the uncertainties of a changing world in some cozy arbitrary doctrine, then we had better face the likelihood that tomorrow the Dark Ages will return."

    PROLOGUE TO THE FIRST EDITION, PROLOGUE TO THE SECOND EDITION, INTRODUCTION TO THE FIRST EDITION, INTRODUCTION TO THE SECOND EDITION, PART ONE: STEREOTYPES, I. The Identity of Woman as Woman, 1. The Traditional Approach, 2. The Challenging View, II. The Relation of Woman and Man as Mates, 3. The Masculine Mystique, 4. Marriage a la Mode, 5. Law the Laggard, 6. A House is Not a Homestead, III. The Relation of Woman and World as Milieu, 7. In the Marketplace, 8. The Pearl in the Apron Pocket, PART TWO: ASSUMPTIONS, Prelude, 9. Remembrance of Things Past: The First Assumption, 10. The Living Fossil: The Second Assumption, 11. Portrait of a Lady: The Third Assumption, PART THREE: PROJECTIONS, 12. The Arc of the Future, PART FOUR. INTERPENETRATIONS, 13. Sex and Gende, 14. The Politics of Power, REFERENCES, INDEX

    Biography

    Nancy Reeves