Forget Having It All, Amy Westervelt
Forget Having It All, Amy Westervelt
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Forget "Having It All"
How America Messed Up Motherhood--and How to Fix It

Author: Amy Westervelt

Narrator: Amy Westervelt

Unabridged: 8 hr 36 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Seal Press

Published: 11/13/2018


Synopsis

A clear-eyed look at the history of American ideas about motherhood, how those ideas have impacted all women (whether they have kids or not), and how to fix the inequality that exists as a result.

After filing a story only two hours after giving birth, and then getting straight back to full-time work the next morning, journalist Amy Westervelt had a revelation: America might claim to revere motherhood, but it treats women who have children like crap. From inadequate maternity leave to gender-based double standards, emotional labor to the "motherhood penalty" wage gap, racist devaluing of some mothers and overvaluing of others, and our tendency to consider women's value only in terms of their reproductive capacity, Westervelt became determined to understand how we got here and how the promise of "having it all" ever even became a thing when it was so far from reality for American women.

In Forget "Having It All," Westervelt traces the roots of our modern expectations of mothers and motherhood back to extremist ideas held by the first Puritans who attempted to colonize America and examines how those ideals shifted -- or didn't -- through every generation since. Using this historical backdrop, Westervelt draws out what we should replicate from our past (bringing back home economics, for example, this time with an emphasis on gender-balanced labor in the home), and what we must begin anew as we overhaul American motherhood (including taking a more intersectional view of motherhood, thinking deeply about the ways in which capitalism influences our views on reproduction, and incorporating working fathers into discussions about work-life balance).

In looking for inspiration elsewhere in the world, Westervelt turned not to Scandinavia, where every work-life balance story inevitably ends up, but to Japan where politicians, in an increasingly desperate effort to increase the country's birth rates (sound familiar?), tried to apply Scandinavian-style policies atop a capitalist democracy not unlike America's, only to find that policy can't do much in the absence of cultural shift. Ultimately, Westervelt presents a measured, historically rooted and research-backed call for workplace policies, cultural norms, and personal attitudes about motherhood that will radically improve the lives of not just working moms but all Americans.

Reviews

Goodreads review by Elise

I found this an illuminating in the history of American feminism, as told through the crucial lens of motherhood and care. At the end of each chapter, Westervelt includes a proposed policy fix and a separate cultural fix for the problem described. Many of these ideas seemed lofty, but they were an i......more

Goodreads review by Alexis

The good: - It's not personal navelgazing (the intro is just used as a jump) - It's not just about middle class white women, and experiences outside that aren't treated as an afterthought--they're integral, and the interplay between white, middle class motherhood that's often used as the basis for pub......more

Goodreads review by Megy

Well-researched and thorough. At times, many times, frustrating (not at the author, but at the reasons we've found ourselves here). Would love to see more men read this book as women have kind of known this information for generations. Still, learning the history and trajectory was eye-opening.......more

This book read like a textbook which is what stopped me from giving it 5 stars. It was dry at times but filled with helpful information. It was more of a history on how America got to this idea of divine motherhood where women live to have children and serve their family and have no desire to achiev......more