Censored : the private life of the movie (1930)

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PRIVATE LIFE OF THE MOVIE nell Med. and become a psychiatrist. She doesn't understand her daughter, who hasn't been inside a church for ten years, who fiercely repudiates the old religion, the old standards. Here she is, forty-seven, no work to do in the home, no intellectual capacity for meeting even her daughter in conversation. Her husband works at the office, plays golf and goes to club meetings in his spare time. This woman has given birth to two children. She was busy then. She felt some relationship to life. What can she do now? Stuart Chase has given her a diagnosis. In "Men and Machines" he says: "There is one department where it seems to me that skill has been lost with no off-setting comparison. We have taken many of the housewife's tasks into the factory and left her to gossip, play bridge, buy more clothes than she needs and make a sad spectacle of herself at so-called culture clubs." Consider her strength. She is a mother. She is a church worker. She is a respectable woman. She is a voter, a worker. And she is organized. Who are we, writers and tinkers, lawyers 116