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Elizabeth Perle McKenna's recent book is a punchy read, offering insight
into the trade-offs and consequences of pursuing traditional measures of success.
It's relevant reading for men as well as for women.
Elizabeth McKenna quit her senior management position in a top publishing house.
By all external measures, she'd "made it". But the satisfaction and pleasure she
gained from her work and her work environment had steadily eroded. Her decision
to resign followed long months of anxiety and fear about her future and questioning
about who she was if not a top editor.
When work doesn't work anymore: women, work and identity was written after
Elizabeth McKenna quit her job. She set up a study at home and spent a year researching
the experiences of other women who, like her, had walked away from the managerial
positions they had spent their adult lives pursuing.
This research tells the story of a particular cohort of women: those baby-boomers
who were the first generation of women to enter the workforce in significant numbers.
But the observations and lessons are also important for men and a younger
generation entering the workforce.
These women brought into the workplace not only their university degrees but new sets
of expectations. "We knew what success looked like," writes Elizabeth McKenna. "We had to
get married like our mothers and have careers like our fathers". Such women
defined success in terms more broad than either of their parents. They were
the superwomen of the 70s and 80s; juggling challenging, meaningful and
well-paid careers with a beautiful home, smiling children and tanned husbands.
As they hit their late 30s and early 40s, these women struggled with questions
of parenthood and family, while around them the workplace changed dramatically.
Superwoman was always a myth. No amount of time-management skills can balance
all the ingredients baby-boomer women were told were necessary for a completely
successful life. Only after careers were well-established did some women
begin to recognise the glass ceiling they were trapped underneath. In
Australia, women are still paid only 79 per cent of the average male wage
and are under-represented in managerial and executive positions. Only 4
per cent of board members and a mere 1 per cent of executive directors in
Australia are women. Those percentages have remained static for the past
five years.
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