Tuesday, April 8, 2014

Second Class Women


It’s ironic that I spend so much time in a place that used to objectify women and treat them as second class citizens. Mind you, not all of the women but certainly many of those who were associated with the iconic images of Palm Springs back in the 40s, 50s and 60s.

As an unabashed woman-supporter and cautious admirer of alpha females the world over, it’s a bit strange for me to read articles about the gushing history of such a place. It was a world where matronly women ruled the country club and their husbands ran the nightclub circuit.
                                           






It was the stuff of self-induced legends from the glorification of the Rat Pack to after-hour escapades at Chi-Chi’s nightclub downtown. It moved from the honored cocktail hour to country club swaps. Supermarket tabloids celebrated Hollywood debauchery and starlet moral sacrifices on weekends. Much of our history here is a cliché in and of itself.





Palm Springs was, and ironically still is, trying to paint itself as someplace different from the rest of the world. Someplace where normal behavior isn’t always the norm and that’s OK. It was a wonderful playground in which to base my novel “Debris.”

Like much of the rest of the country, that idiotic perception of women started to change back in the sixties with the publication of such feminine literature as ‘The Feminine Mystic’ and advances by the Women’s Liberation Movement, growing sexual freedom (the pill) and other iconic seismic changes in women’s lives.

I’ve tried to add a bit of that iconic history in my novel “Love in the A Shau” but from several different female perspectives. From Colleen’s expected role in her high society world, to Peggy’s experimentation with love, to Summer’s hippie search for some meaning in her life and finally Claudia’s desperate search for love and affection in all the wrong places.

Fast-forward a couple of decades later and I have a daughter running for state office, a daughter-in-law who is passionate about her children’s education and three granddaughters who represent the future of feminism in all its glory.




Step aside folks, these women are coming through…and they are nothing but class.

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