Quotessence
Home / Quotes / Quote by Anna Coote; Beatrix Campbell

Quote by Anna Coote; Beatrix Campbell

“If we consider the call for "equal opportunity" in this light, it has a hollow ring about it.' Opportunity' implies 'choice,' yet there has never been any real choice for women. Their position as low-paid, part-time, intermittent, secondary wage earners has determined their role in the home since the beginning of he industrial revolution.”

Quote by Anna Coote; Beatrix Campbell

Author

Anna Coote; Beatrix Campbell

Browse famous quotes and profile details for Anna Coote; Beatrix Campbell. more

You May Also Like

“The idea of women as a reserve army of labour is double-sided, in a sense. Women are a spare resource for employers in times of expansion; they are also a spare resource for politicians to call upon in times of recession. When it ceases to be convenient to spend money on public services, responsibility is handed back to those two euphemisms for unpaid female labour, 'the community' and 'the family.”

“We are struggling to change the values and priorities of men alongside us, as well as the way they conduct themselves - in short, to change the world. All the while, we are fighting to assert our own interpretations of what we are doing and our own definitions of what we are, against the man-made versions, which tend to ridicule, belittle or ignore our efforts and achievements.”

“Woman was an idol of belly-magic. She seemed to swell and give birth by her own law... Man honored but feared her. She was the black maw that had spat him forth and would devour him anew. Men, bonding together, invented culture as a defense against female nature... from this ... has come the spectacular glory of male civilization, which has lifted woman with it. The very language and logic modern woman uses to assail patriarchal culture were the invention of men. Hence, the sexes are caught in a comedy of historical indebtedness. Man, repelled by his debt to a physical mother, created an alternate reality, a heterocosm to give him the illusion of freedom. Woman, at first content to accept man's protections but now inflamed with desire for her own illusory freedom, invades man's systems and suppresses her indebtedness to him as she steals them.”