Thursday, January 2, 2020
Ladies Home Journal Sit-In of 1970 Feminsts Take Over
Many people hear the term ââ¬Å"sit-inâ⬠and think of the Civil Rights Movement or opposition to the Vietnam War. But feminists held sit-ins, too, advocating for womenââ¬â¢s rights and a variety of specific goals. On March 18, 1970, feminists staged the Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal sit-in. At least a hundred women marched into the Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal office to protest the way the magazineââ¬â¢s mostly male staff depicted womenââ¬â¢s interests. Ironically, the magazines motto was ââ¬Å"Never Underestimate the Power of a Woman. Taking Over the Magazine Feminists involved in the Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal sit-in were members of groups such as Media Women, New York Radical Women, NOW, and Redstockings. The organizers called on friends - including reporters, film students and law students - to help with logistics and advice for the dayââ¬â¢s protest. The Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal sit-in lasted all day. The protesters occupied the office for 11 hours. They presented their demands to editor-in-chief John Mack Carter and senior editor Lenore Hershey, who was one of the only female members of the editorial staff. The feminist protesters brought a mock magazine titled the ââ¬Å"Womenââ¬â¢s Liberated Journalâ⬠and displayed a banner reading ââ¬Å"Womenââ¬â¢s Liberated Journalâ⬠from the office windows. Why Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal? Feminist groups in New York objected to most of the womenââ¬â¢s magazines of the day, but they decided on a Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal sit-in because of its sizable circulation (over 14 million readers per month at the time) and because one of their members used to work there. The leaders of the protest were able to enter the offices with her in advance to scout out the location.à Glossy Womenââ¬â¢s Magazine Issues Womenââ¬â¢s magazines were often a target of feminist complaints. The Womenââ¬â¢s Liberation Movement objected to stories that focused constantly on beauty and housework while perpetuating the myths of the patriarchal establishment. One of the most famous running columns in Ladies Home Journal was called Can This Marriage Be Saved?, in which women wrote in for advice on their troubled marriages and received advice from the magazines mostly male writers. Many of the wives writing in were in abusive marriages, but the magazines advice typically blamed them for not making their husbands happy enough. Radical feminists wanted to protest the domination of the magazines by men and advertisers (who were also mostly men). For example, womenââ¬â¢s magazines made vast amounts of money from ads for beauty products; the shampoo companies insisted on running articles such as ââ¬Å"How to Wash Your Hair and Keep it Shinyâ⬠next to the hair care ads, thus ensuring a cycle of profitable advertising and editorial content. Womens lives had changed significantly since the magazine debuted in 1883, but the content continued to focus on domesticity and patriarchal notions of female subservience. The feminists at the Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal sit-in had a number of demands, including: Hire a female editor-in-chief and an all-female editorial staffHave women write columns and articles, to avoid inherent male biasHire non-white women according to the percentage of minorities in the U.S. populationRaise the womenââ¬â¢s salariesProvide free day care on the premises, since the magazine claims to care about women and childrenOpen editorial meetings to all employees, to eliminate the traditional power hierarchyStop running ads that degrade women or ads from companies that exploit womenStop running articles tied in to advertisingEnd the ââ¬Å"Can this Marriage be Saved?â⬠column New Article Ideas The feminists came to the Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal sit-in with suggestions for articles to replace the mythical happy homemaker and other shallow, deceptive pieces. Susan Brownmiller, who participated in the protest, recalls some of the feministsââ¬â¢ suggestions in her book In Our Time: Memoir of a Revolution. Their suggested article titles included: How to Get a DivorceHow to Have an OrgasmWhat to Tell Your Draft-Age SonHow Detergents Harm Our Rivers and StreamsHow Psychiatrists Hurt Womenââ¬âand Why These ideas obviously contrasted the usual messages of womenââ¬â¢s magazines and their advertisers. Feminists complained that the magazines pretended single parents did not exist and that household consumer products somehow led to righteous happiness. And the magazines definitely avoiding talking about powerful issues such as womenââ¬â¢s sexuality or the Vietnam War. Results of the Sit-In After the Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal sit in, editor John Mack Carter refused to resign from his job, but he agreed to let the feminists produce a portion of an issue of Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal, which appeared in August 1970 and included articles such as ââ¬Å"Should This Marriage Be Saved?â⬠and ââ¬Å"Your Daughterââ¬â¢s Education.â⬠à He also promised to look into the feasibility of an on-site day care center. A few years later in 1973, Lenore Hershey became the editor-in-chief of Ladiesââ¬â¢ Home Journal, and since then, all the editors-in-chief have been women: Myrna Blyth succeeded Hershey in 1981, followed by Diane Salvatore (ed. 2002-2008) and Sally Lee (2008-2014). In 2014, the magazine ceased its monthly publication and shifted to a quarterly special-interest publication.
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