
The Good Girls Revolt
How the Women of Newsweek Sued their Bosses and Changed the Workplace
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Narrated by:
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Susan Larkin
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By:
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Lynn Povich
The inspiration behind the Amazon original series
It was the 1960s - a time of economic boom and social strife. Young women poured into the workplace, but the “Help Wanted” ads were segregated by gender and the “Mad Men” office culture was rife with sexual stereotyping and discrimination. Lynn Povich was one of the lucky ones, landing a job at Newsweek, renowned for its cutting-edge coverage of civil rights and the “Swinging Sixties.” Nora Ephron, Jane Bryant Quinn, Ellen Goodman, and Susan Brownmiller all started there as well. It was a top-notch job - for a girl - at an exciting place. But it was a dead end.
Women researchers sometimes became reporters, rarely writers, and never editors. Any aspiring female journalist was told, “If you want to be a writer, go somewhere else.” On March 16, 1970, the day Newsweek published a cover story on the fledgling feminist movement entitled “Women in Revolt,” forty-six Newsweek women charged the magazine with discrimination in hiring and promotion. It was the first female class action lawsuit - the first by women journalists - and it inspired other women in the media to quickly follow suit. Lynn Povich was one of the ringleaders.
In The Good Girls Revolt, she evocatively tells the story of this dramatic turning point through the lives of several participants. With warmth, humor, and perspective, she shows how personal experiences and cultural shifts led a group of well-mannered, largely apolitical women, raised in the 1940s and 1950s, to challenge their bosses - and what happened after they did. For many, filing the suit was a radicalizing act that empowered them to “find themselves” and fight back. Others lost their way amid opportunities, pressures, discouragements, and hostilities they weren’t prepared to navigate. The Good Girls Revolt also explores why changes in the law didn’t solve everything. Through the lives of young female journalists at Newsweek today, Lynn Povich shows what has - and hasn’t - changed in the workplace.
©2012 Lynn Povich (P)2014 Audible Inc.Listeners also enjoyed...




















Great description of an important moment in history
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Women Take Charge of The Sexism In Workplace--Sue
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Slow, but all in all okay
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Never knew this history
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what a great book!
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Feminism has been mis-defined for years
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Good book read by Ms Robot.
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My biggest complaint was the narrator, however. She seemed to struggle to pronounce some last names of major characters. Most frustratingly, no one corrected her multiple mispronunciations of Barnard College. (It's "BAR-nard", not "ber-NARD".)
Unfortunately just ok
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A great story but Terrible narrator
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Great history lesson
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