Beauvoir is crucial to the rise of expressive individualism, since she promoted a false anthropology that divorced sex from gender.
Brenda M. Hafera
Many women are finding new ways to embrace professional and civic roles without marginalizing maternity.
America's political tradition was not built on radical autonomy, but rather on a freedom rooted in human nature and a robust moral order.
Can (and should) conservatives reclaim feminism from the radicals?
Men and women must work together to help boys rise above the challenges they presently face.
Carl Trueman offers an accessible intellectual history of expressive individualism.
For both Friedan's and Flaubert’s women have passing, rather than compelling, interests. They experience a crisis of purpose unfulfilled in domestic life.
In his new Sanditon series, Andrew Davies’ imagination did not capture the intricacies and craft of Jane Austen.
The Emancipation Memorial's depiction of Archer Alexander is powerful not just for his physicality but because he has the force of right behind him.
Brenda M. Hafera is the assistant director and senior policy analyst for the Simon Center for American Studies at The Heritage Foundation.