Introduction to Political Theory

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Women’s work?


A


huge amount of attention has been
devoted in the media to the changing roles
of women. An example of this can be
found in a 2003 cover story of The Observer
magazine, in which women who had become
corporate executives were questioned as to how
they perceived both their position, and those of
women in general, in society.


  1. One interviewee, Sunita Gloster, is head of an
    advertising agency and argues that more and
    more women are facing reality head on; they
    are more confident and expected to be treated
    with respect and fairness if they take time off
    to have children. ‘Success’, she says, ‘used to
    be defined by a traditional male standard –
    rising up the corporate ladder, with rewards
    of money and status. Now women define
    success by a more feminine standard: satis -
    faction, fulfilment, making a difference – and
    that can come in many forms’.

  2. Sahar Hashemi, who co-founded a chain
    of companies and who runs her own
    consultancy, insists that women want equality


with, and not superiority over, men, and that
they should celebrate being women, ‘not try
to disguise it’. ‘It’s about being women in our
own right and doing things on our own
terms’.


  1. Patricia Hewitt, as a former member of the
    British Cabinet, argues that things are getting
    better but too many women who work
    outside the home feel that it is impossible to
    have children. ‘An unofficial “parent bar” is
    operating, and I think that’s the biggest issue
    for working women’.

  2. Caroline Plumb, who developed a graduate
    recruitment and research agency, notes that
    women need to be stronger on self-
    promotion, declaring that ‘success for me is
    about having an interesting life, and being
    exposed to a wide range of experiences and
    people’.

  3. Ronnie Cook, a New Yorker running her own
    design consultancy in the UK, compares the
    ‘warrior spirit’ of American women with the
    more laid-back approach she finds in London.
    In her view young men differ in their attitude


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