Prologue to a social movement
In the aftermath of World War II, the lives of women in developed countries changed dramatically. Household technology eased the burdens of homemaking; life expectancies increased dramatically; and the growth of the service sector opened up thousands of jobs not dependent on physical strength. Despite these socioeconomic transformations, cultural attitudes (especially concerning women's work) and legal precedents still reinforced sexual inequalities. A hint of the desire for change appeared in Simone de Beauvoir's Le Deuxième Sexe (1949; The Second Sex). It became a worldwide best-seller and raised feminist consciousness by stressing that liberation for women was liberation for men too.
The first public indication that change was imminent came with women's reaction to the 1963 publication of Betty Friedan's The Feminine Mystique. Friedan spoke of the problem that lay buried, unspoken in the minds of the suburban housewife: utter boredom and lack of fulfillment. Women who had been told that they had it allnice houses, lovely children, responsible husbandswere deadened by domesticity, she said, and they were too socially conditioned to recognize their own desperation. The Feminine Mystique was an immediate best-seller. Friedan had struck a chord.

