Mad Men

1935 Words4 Pages

The influence of the media on women is not unknown, but it was especially prevalent in the 1960s. According to David Croteau and William Hoynes, both professors of sociology, “Media images of women and men reflect and reproduce a whole set of stereotypical but changing gender roles” (quoted in Mahrdt 1) and, as society changes and opinions are altered, television shows adapt. However, the television show Mad Men is unique because it does not show life today, but the life of the 1960s. It shows what life was like for the women who lived during a time when the “feminine mystique” controlled society.
While Mad Men may seem to be just another sexist show dominated by chauvinist men and submissive women, it is, in fact, a time piece. The creator for the series, Matthew Weiner, was recreating a show of historical facts through his fictional characters. Matthew Weiner shows the life for women of the ‘60s as they struggle with their identities in a sexist society. He does this through the lives of Betty Draper, Joan Holloway, and Peggy Olson.
Betty Friedan’s book, The Feminine Mystique, explains the mind set of society in the 1960s. She writes that the women of the ‘60s were identified only as creatures looking for “sex, babies, and home” (Friedan 36). She goes on to say “The only passion, the only pursuit, the only goal a woman [was] permitted [was] the pursuit of a man” (Friedan 36). This mind set, this “feminine mystique,” is clearly shown throughout the show Mad Men. The side effect of the feminine mystique hurt all the women of this time. Matthew Weiner shows how this conception of the “ideal woman” hurt all of his lead women. The consequences are shown in the two women who bought into the idea, Betty and Joan, and the one who re...

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... Men.” Shari Mahrdt. Word Press.com, Dec. 2012. Web. 5 Dec 2013
“The Mountain King.” Mad Men: Season Two. Writ. Matthew Weiner and Robin Veith. Dir. Alan Taylor. Lionsgate, 2009. DVD.
“New Amsterdam.” Mad Men: Season One. Writ. Lisa Albert. Dir. Tim Hunter. Lionsgate, 2008. DVD.
“The New Girl.” Mad Men: Season Two. Writ. Matthew Weiner and Robin Veith. Dir. Jennifer Getzinger. Lionsgate, 2009. DVD.
Newman, Stephanie, Dr. Mad Men on the Couch: Analyzing the Minds of the Men and Women of the Hit Tv Show. New York: Thomas Dunne, 2012. 87-157. Print
“Red in the Face.” Mad Men: Season One. Writ. Bridget Bedard. Dir. Tim Hunter. Lionsgate, 2008. DVD.
“Smoke Gets in Your Eyes.” Mad Men: Season One. Writ. Matthew Weiner. Dir. Alan Taylor. Lionsgate, 2008. DVD.
“The Wheel.” Mad Men: Season One. Writ. Matthew Weiner and Robin Veith. Dir. Matthew Weiner. Lionsgate, 2008. DVD.

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