Women's
Lib
In Britain in 1967, a man working in a factory was paid about £21
a week, while a woman was paid only £10 a week for doing exactly the
same job.
Women's Liberation became a burning issue in the 1960s, under the
leadership of dedicated campaigners such as Betty Friedan. Women took
to the streets demanding equality and burning their bra's along the
way - for the first time, men got to see women's underwear in
daylight.
In
1970, a new book by a controversial new author hit the shops. The book
was The Female Eunuch and the author was Germaine Greer. The
book examined female stereotyping and women's sexuality - the press at
the time said it was "guaranteed to offend nearly everyone".
According to Greer, an Australian lecturer at England's University
of Warwick, the book was designed to be an inspiration to women,
maintaining that if women realised their true potential as independent
people, the world would be a far better place. She argued that
traditional marriage was just a legalized form of slavery for women.
1975 was proclaimed "International Women's Year" |