Word: heyns
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Dates: during 1990-1999
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...Chip '94 C 72 Hammerstein, Matt '94 OG 73 Miller, Kevin '94 DT 74 Michels, Mark '94 DT 76 Pinson, Greg '94 OG 77 Lee, Erik '93 DT 78 Higgs, Trevor, '93 DT 79 Dodge, Jeff '94 OL 80 Thompson, D.J. '95 WR 81 Hunt, Carter '93 DL 83 Heyn, Bill '94 LB 84 Haimes, Spencer '94 TE 84 Leach, Jason '95 LB 85 Granato, Steve '93 TE 86 Wilson, Stu '93 TE 87 Janicki, Jay '95 TE 88 Kmak, Ed '93 WR 90 Jones, Brandon '94 WR 91 Langford, Jim '94 TE 92 Kiernaan, David '94 LB 93 Prostic...
...Dalma Heyn's study of unfaithful wives begins promisingly with a startling canvass of literature's most famous adulteresses. From Anna Karenina to Emma Bovary, the cheating woman pays a steep price for her unchecked sexuality: she winds up dead. "What if she were your best friend, or your sister?" Heyn challenges. "Would you still need to see her punished?" Heyn, it seems in her opening pages, is going to vivisect the biases that continue to hold women to a different sexual standard from men. Oh boy, I think with post-Murphy Brown glee. Dan Quayle is going to hate...
Unfortunately, instead of a leveled playing field we get a portrait of the American wife as a self-deluded woman who is steeped more in the ethos of the '50s than the '90s, largely by her own unconscious design. Based on a slender sampling of unfaithful wives, Heyn makes sweeping generalizations about the malleability and self-deception of American wives and their inability to assert their own needs within the marital relationship. All of this -- which is presented with oozing sympathy but is actually quite patronizing -- is used to justify a wife's decision to take a lover to find...
...Heyn argues that women, even sexually active ones, undergo a transformation at the altar that is born largely of reading too many happily-ever-after fairy tales. They abandon their true needs and desires to don the robes of sexlessness, self-sacrifice and self-denial. "The Perfect Wife, is, of course, Donna Reed," Heyn writes. "Her virtue exists in direct proportion to how much of her self is whittled away." Having dampened her "visceral, honest, unshaped and uncontrolled responses," the American wife begins to feel like a shadow or zombie. To retrieve her personhood, she understandably takes a lover. Suddenly...
...many women really match this pitiable description? But if Heyn is right -- if, in fact, a large cross section of American wives suffer from Donna Reed syndrome -- the news here is not that women have extramarital affairs and feel good about their infidelities, as Heyn's fluid narrative suggests. Rather, the news is that after 30 years of battling to shore up women's self-esteem and break down entrenched sex roles, the feminist movement has achieved nothing. That women have learned nothing. That women still bask in a sense of worthlessness that sounds ominously like Betty Friedan's "problem...