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"'''Barefoot and pregnant'''" is a [[figure of speech]] most commonly associated with the idea that women should not work outside the home and should have many children during their reproductive years. It has several other meanings as well. my friend Jordan says it all the time.
"'''Barefoot and pregnant'''" is a [[figure of speech]] most commonly associated with the idea that women should not work outside the home and should have many children during their reproductive years. It has several other meanings as well.


The phrase "barefoot and pregnant" seems to have been introduced in the early twentieth century by the American doctor [[Arthur E. Hertzler]] from Kansas, who said: "The only way to keep a woman happy is to keep her barefoot and pregnant."<ref>Eugene Register-Guard, [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=sM4TAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ruIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4809,3737819&dq=barefoot-and-pregnant&hl=en It's All Right to Keep Her Happy, But, Men, Don't Do Her Chores], Joseph H. Peck, M.D., May 21, 1958</ref> By the mid-1900s, the phrase had passed into common parlance, so much so that an article from 1949 states: "By early 1949, [[TWA]] was—in the words of its new president, Ralph S. Damon—both 'barefoot and pregnant.'"<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=hUZEAAAAIAAJ&q=%22barefoot+and+pregnant%22&dq=%22barefoot+and+pregnant%22&lr=&as_drrb_is=b&as_minm_is=0&as_miny_is=1800&as_maxm_is=0&as_maxy_is=1950&as_brr=0 Forbes, Vol. 64, 1949]</ref>
The phrase "barefoot and pregnant" seems to have been introduced in the early twentieth century by the American doctor [[Arthur E. Hertzler]] from Kansas, who said: "The only way to keep a woman happy is to keep her barefoot and pregnant."<ref>Eugene Register-Guard, [https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=sM4TAAAAIBAJ&sjid=ruIDAAAAIBAJ&pg=4809,3737819&dq=barefoot-and-pregnant&hl=en It's All Right to Keep Her Happy, But, Men, Don't Do Her Chores], Joseph H. Peck, M.D., May 21, 1958</ref> By the mid-1900s, the phrase had passed into common parlance, so much so that an article from 1949 states: "By early 1949, [[TWA]] was—in the words of its new president, Ralph S. Damon—both 'barefoot and pregnant.'"<ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=hUZEAAAAIAAJ&q=%22barefoot+and+pregnant%22&dq=%22barefoot+and+pregnant%22&lr=&as_drrb_is=b&as_minm_is=0&as_miny_is=1800&as_maxm_is=0&as_maxy_is=1950&as_brr=0 Forbes, Vol. 64, 1949]</ref>

Revision as of 17:41, 14 September 2018

"Barefoot and pregnant" is a figure of speech most commonly associated with the idea that women should not work outside the home and should have many children during their reproductive years. It has several other meanings as well.

The phrase "barefoot and pregnant" seems to have been introduced in the early twentieth century by the American doctor Arthur E. Hertzler from Kansas, who said: "The only way to keep a woman happy is to keep her barefoot and pregnant."[1] By the mid-1900s, the phrase had passed into common parlance, so much so that an article from 1949 states: "By early 1949, TWA was—in the words of its new president, Ralph S. Damon—both 'barefoot and pregnant.'"[2]

The variation "barefoot and pregnant in the kitchen" has been associated with the phrase "Kinder, Küche, Kirche" (translated "children, kitchen, church"), used under the German Empire to describe a woman's role in society. A comparable phrase, "Good Wife, Wise Mother", emerged in Meiji Japan.[3][4]

Negative connotations

A common assumption is that the expression relates to housewives not leaving the home, and thus not needing shoes. Indeed, in the sex discrimination case of Volovsek v. Wisconsin Dept. of Agric., No. 02-2074 (7th Cir. September 18, 2003), the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit ruled that a woman who allegedly overheard her manager using the phrase could take her case to a jury. However, the court also dismissed the remaining claims on summary judgment with respect to both discrimination and retaliation against DATCP for lack of evidence.[5]

Feminists often cite the phrase in a negative, socially critical context. Author Shinine Antony wrote a 2002 collection of short stories entitled Barefoot and Pregnant, explaining in a later interview that, "Barefoot And Pregnant is a phrase that pokes fun at chauvinists who want their women barefoot (so that they are unable to socialize) and pregnant (helpless). This follows the general image of society in which women are merely objects."[6]

Annually, the Philadelphia chapter of the National Organization for Women bestows a Barefoot and Pregnant Award "to persons in the community who have done the most to perpetuate outmoded images of women and who have refused to recognize that women are, in fact, human beings."[7]

Literary associations

  • Novelist David Baldacci linked the phrase to a hillbilly West Virginia: “All men living in the nineteenth century. Barefoot and pregnant and in the kitchen just about covers their idea of a woman's role in life”.[8]
  • In the futuristic novel Bold as Love, a group of women warn themselves about a rising radical: “Then after the revolution you'll end up chained to the stove in peekaboo panties, all over again.' 'Barefoot and not even pregnant,' added someone else. 'He's into population control.'”[9]

See also

References

  1. ^ Eugene Register-Guard, It's All Right to Keep Her Happy, But, Men, Don't Do Her Chores, Joseph H. Peck, M.D., May 21, 1958
  2. ^ Forbes, Vol. 64, 1949
  3. ^ Susan D. Holloway, Women and Family in Contemporary Japan (2010) p. 10
  4. ^ K. Sechiyama, Patriarchy in East Asia (2013) p. 67
  5. ^ Volovsek v. Wisconsin Dept. of Agric.
  6. ^ The Sunday Tribune - Spectrum - Literature
  7. ^ National Organization for Women. Philadelphia Chapter Records, 1968-1977, The Historical Society of Pennsylvania
  8. ^ David Baldacci (2012). Zero Day. p. 183.
  9. ^ Gwyneth Jones (2002). Bold as Love. p. 3.