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Subverted
Subverted: How I Helped the Sexual Revolution Hijack the Women's Movement | Sue Ellen Browder
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Contraception and abortion were not originally part of the 1960s womens movement. How did the womens movement, which fought for equal opportunity for women in education and the workplace, and the sexual revolution, which reduced women to ambitious sex objects, become so united? In Subverted, Sue Ellen Browder documents for the first time how it all happened, in her own life and in the life of an entire country. Trained at the University of Missouri School of Journalism to be an investigative journalist, Browder unwittingly betrayed her true calling and became a propagandist for sexual liberation. As a long-time freelance writer for Cosmopolitan magazine, she wrote pieces meant to soft-sell unmarried sex, contraception, and abortion as the single womans path to personal fulfillment. She did not realize until much later that propagandists higher and cleverer than herself were influencing her thinking and her personal choices as they subverted the womens movement. The thirst for truth, integrity, and justice for women that led Browder into journalism in the first place eventually led her to find forgiveness and freedom in the place she least expected to find them. Her in-depth research, her probing analysis, and her honest self-reflection set the record straight and illumine a way forward for others who have suffered from the unholy alliance between the womens movement and the sexual revolution.
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I ❤️d this book and was surprised at how little I knew about the women's movement. This book made me feel just a little bit smarter and it will help me understand others in the future. I handed it to an angry high school senior that did nothing but yell at her male classmates and cry her feminism battle cry daily in AP chemistry. She took notes and turned it back to me saying, "I didn't really know!"
I've also always wondered about Cosmopolitan.