[NIFL-WOMENLIT:3027] child rearing books-xpost from todaysnews@womensenews.org

From: Daphne Greenberg (ALCDGG@langate.gsu.edu)
Date: Fri Oct 01 2004 - 09:10:36 EDT


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todaysnews@womensenews.org posted the following post (see below). I
thought that it raised important issues about thinking about the
materials we use in our adult literacy classes and biases that may exist
in them. Have any of you noticed any biases (gender, race, age, ability,
orientation, etc) in materials that you have used? Here is the post:

Feminists Protest Spock's Sex Bias 

By Louise Bernikow
WeNews historian 

October 1969: Feminists Spank Spock
 

(WOMENSENEWS)--Dr. Benjamin Spock revolutionized child care in 1946
with "The Commonsense Book of Baby and Child Care," in which the
pediatrician urged mothers to trust their own instincts instead of
deferring to rigid rules and authoritarian doctors.

The book sold millions of copies, year after year. By 1967, with the
United States at war in Vietnam, Dr. Spock urged resistance to the
"illegitimate authority" of the military draft. He opposed nuclear
proliferation. He was arrested often. A real hero. With one exception.

The exception was women. Feminists, whose Second Wave movement was just
beginning, found much to critique in Dr. Spock's espousal of rigid sex
roles. The care-giver in his writing was always "mother;" the child was
"he." Child-raising and housework were women's work. His popular advice
column for Redbook magazine warned young mothers not to do otherwise.

But in October 1969, that magazine carried a letter of protest from 25
leading feminists. The idea, they wrote, that women were most suited to
"care of husband, care of home and care of children" was "insulting,
anti-woman and scientifically false."

While Dr. Spock became even more prominent in burgeoning movements for
peace, "no nukes" and abortion rights--the Nixon White House called the
young rebels "a Spock-marked generation"--feminists kept up the
critique. Women in those progressive movements continued to raise his
consciousness.

It began to have an effect. By 1976, Spock's book carried a preface
saying that he had revised his text "to eliminate the sexist biases of
the sort that help to create and perpetuate discrimination against girls
and women." In following decade, Spock began referring to Spock
alternated between "she" and "he" when referring to a child. He also
acknowledged the "help" of his wife, Betty, whose invisible
contributions to his work had been seen by many as another form of
sexist bias. Ms. Magazine included him as a hero of the women's
movement. Dr. Spock died in 1998, and his book is now in its seventh
edition.

Louise Bernikow is the author of seven books and numerous magazine
articles. She travels to campuses and community groups with a lecture
and slide show about activism called "The Shoulders We Stand On: Women
as Agents of Change." She can be reached at weezieman@aol.com.
 



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