Indeed, Judith Stacey (1987) points out that emphasis on the negative aspects of marriage and motherhood in early second-wave feminism attracted the label anti-family. she argues, It was there a profound crisis of the nuclear family system in the West represented by ‘The massive increase of female participation in higher education and the labour force which helped to generate secondwave feminism in the …show more content…
the family era of economically-dependent and full-time housewives is regarded as a thing of the past. Women in 20th century socialized and educated, as are men, to enhance their personal development, to make an economic contribution, and to contribute fully to public life. As known view, men and women necessarily should inhabit separate spheres of life, with women taking domestic roles and meeting the emotional-expressive needs of society, and men taking work and public roles and thus meeting society's instrumental needs. Man at work and woman at the hearth, it is not only in the best interest of society but is how the world has always been and ever shall be. but these things and traditional gender roles largely obsolete and the locking of each sex into separate spheres considered as retarding of personal development and violating personal liberty