In the Media
IWF in the News: A NeW Direction for Female Happiness
According to the United States General
Social Survey, women's overall level of happiness has dropped since
1972. Two professors at The Wharton School at the University of
Pennsylvania released a paper exploring female happiness, "The Paradox
of Declining Female Happiness," this spring which garnered national
press attention. One of the major findings in this study is that
women's happiness has declined both compared to 35 years ago and
compared to men's happiness.
This study has
prompted me to ask once again-Is feminism good for women? Does
feminism make women happier? What does feminism hold for me?
I began asking these
questions five years ago. I had just returned for my third year of
college at the University of Virginia (UVA) after an internship in
Washington, D.C. During my time in D.C., I had enjoyed being
surrounded by ambitious conservative women. I sought out a club for
conservative women on campus. Much to my disappointment, nothing like
this existed, so on September 29, 2004, I founded a book club for
conservative women at UVA, the Network of enlightened Women (NeW).
NeW was started to fill a niche on one
campus. It turns out there was a need for NeW elsewhere. Within a
few months of starting NeW at UVA, women from other campuses contacted
me to see if they could start chapters of NeW on their campuses. That
began our national expansion. NeW grew steadily-one chapter at a time
as more and more women heard about NeW. NeW continues to grow this way.
Today, we are celebrating NeW's fifth anniversary. In these last five years, NeW has grown to over 15 campuses, held four national conferences in D.C., launched the NeW Blog and been covered by national press such as TIME, The AP and The Washington Post.
NeW's rapid growth demonstrates on the
grassroots level what this study found in surveys: Women are still
trying to figure out how to manage our lives. Feminism does not hold
all the answers. We want to talk about it.
NeW members regularly discuss the
opportunities and challenges facing women today as well as feminism.
One of the most popular books that the NeW book clubs read is What Our Mothers Didn't Tell Us: Why Happiness Eludes the Modern Woman by Danielle Crittenden. Crittenden exposes how feminism has hurt
women today, such as by selling the idea that the key to female
happiness is independence. Who Stole Feminism? by Christina Hoff Sommers and The Politically Incorrect Guide to Women, Sex, and Feminism by
Carrie Lukas are two other popular books for NeW chapters. These books
resonate with young women, much more so than a radical feminist agenda.
Many NeW chapters even hold campus-wide
events to broaden the discussion. Among others, NeW chapters have
hosted speakers, held careers panels and sponsored debates. Take
Blayne Bennett, the President of the NeW chapter at Arizona State
University, for example. She was frustrated by the negative attitude
toward men that campus feminists promoted through The Vagina Monologues. In
response, she organized a Gentlemen's Showcase to encourage her peers
to talk about chivalry, gentlemen and relations between the sexes. At
the Gentlemen's Showcase, the ladies of NeW honored the top ten
most-nominated gentlemen at ASU to show their appreciation for those
men who treated women with dignity and respect. This event sparked
quite a discussion.
Five years ago, I did not anticipate
NeW becoming a national movement. NeW's success is a product of
college women rebelling against the feminist message that dominates
campus and trying proactively to find ways to increase their level of
happiness. Young women are seeking a new message-one that embraces
femininity, acknowledges that there are sex differences and values the
role of women as mothers and in the workplace. NeW provides a place
for women to explore this message and seeks to turn women in a NeW
direction-one that will lead to an increase in women's happiness.





