My previous good friend Eli Zaretsky, the writer of Capitalism, the Household, and Private Life, has usually advised me that of all of the actions of the Sixties, the feminist revolution has had essentially the most intense psychological impression on American life and politics. The purpose is debatable-certainly the revolution in civil rights has stirred the country-but when you take a look at American politics of the final fifty years and on the social conflicts which have divided us, adjustments in girls’s standing and opinions, and the response these have engendered amongst males, have performed an unlimited, and typically, unacknowledged position.