How Older Women Are Trying to Change the World
Beware older women. Three American women aged 55 to 70 are leading presidential candidates.
And why not? New York Times columnist Gail Collins has just published a new book called No Stopping Us Now, a chronicle of “the adventures of older women in American history”. She quotes 40-year-old Elizabeth Cady Stanton, a
Contrast that attitude- we shall not be in our prime before 50! - with the modern assumption that menopause is a “change of life” to be dreaded, managed and treated. Historian Susan Mattern challenges this view,
The older we get, the more risks we are willing to take. The same tendency may well be true of men, but male risk-taking has historically been associated with dramatic personal changes in later life: the red convertible,
For women who have advanced their careers playing by male rules, risk-taking is more likely to focus on overturning the existing order.
Many older women think of later life not as retirement and certainly not as a post-menopausal interlude, but as “phase three,” the phase after child rearing.