Fascinating Womanhood

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Fascinating Womanhood:
A Guide to a Happy Marriage
Fascinating Womanhood.jpg
Author Helen B. Andelin
Country USA
Subject Self-help, marriage, interpersonal relations
Publisher Pacific Press
Santa Barbara
(self-published)[1]
Publication date
January 1, 1963
Media type Print (Hardcover)
ISBN 9780553384277
OCLC 80146122
Followed by The Fascinating Girl

Fascinating Womanhood is a book written by Helen Andelin in 1963. The book recently went into its sixth edition, published by Random House.[2] The book has sold over 2,000,000 copies and is credited with starting a grassroots movement among women.

History

Derived from a set of booklets published in the 1920s and 1930s by the Psychological Press, the book seeks to help traditionally-minded women to make their marriages "a lifelong love affair".[3] According to Time Magazine, Mrs. Andelin wrote Fascinating Womanhood when "she felt her own marriage going sour".[4] The book's self-published edition sold over 400,000 copies,[4] and since being published by Random House, the book has sold an additional 1.6 million-plus copies.[3] The book serves as a touchstone for those of the anti-feminist persuasion.

Sources

The book takes many of its sources from historical women and from examples provided in classic literature. As one of the "real life" women, Mumtaz Mahal of Taj Mahal fame is cited as one of the ideal women who possessed both an Angelic and a Human side. More sources come from classic literature: Amelia (the original Domestic Goddess) of William Makepeace Thackeray's Vanity Fair; Agnes and Dora from David Copperfield by Charles Dickens; and Deruchette from Victor Hugo's Toilers of the Sea.

Fascinating Womanhood movement

Although the book was published in the mid-1960s when second wave feminism became part of the American mainstream, Fascinating Womanhood's traditional explication of happy marriage resonated in the minds and hearts of millions of women. By 1975, according to Time magazine, the movement included 11,000 teachers and over 300,000 women had taken the series of Fascinating Womanhood classes.[5]

Unlike other antifeminism movements of the 1960s and 1970s, the Fascinating Womanhood Movement continues today. The now-deceased Helen Andelin maintained a website that received over a quarter of a million visits.[6] The classes continue in Namibia, The Philippines, Japan, Malaysia, and in the United States in Alabama, Arizona, California, Florida, Utah, and Virginia.[6]

Academic attention

Fascinating Womanhood has gained the attention of academic writers who, in the main, regard the book as detrimental to women in various ways. In 1978, psychologist Martha L. Rogers wrote an article ("Fascinating Womanhood as a Regression in the Emotional Maturation of Women") positing the argument that women who follow the teachings of Fascinating Womanhood were doing so out of a fear of being self-actualized individuals.[7] Juanne N. Clarke of Wilfrid Laurier University wrote that the Fascinating Womanhood movement used Kanter's Model of Commitment Mechanisms to analyze the techniques used to gain women's allegiance to the movement.[8] More recently, Pink Think: Becoming a Woman in Many Uneasy Lessons, authored by Lynn Peril, cited Fascinating Womanhood as part of a body of literature that seeks to promote "an idealized version of womanhood".[9][10] Finally, communications writer Julia Woods discusses the Fascinating Womanhood movement in Gendered Lives: Communication, Gender, and Culture.[11]

References

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  9. Peril, page 215[full citation needed]
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Further reading

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