Was Winning Women’s Right to Work a Mistake?

The pandemic has revealed how tired women are from work and housework. Did the gains from second-wave feminism deliver liberation or overworked and underpaid women?

Nicole Froio
ZORA

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A clothesline with colorful pegs.

In her 2016 Netflix comedy special Baby Cobra, Ali Wong performed her set while looking very pregnant onstage. This was the first time I heard anti-work rhetoric, and it was framed in opposition to feminism. Wearing a dress, flats, and her unborn child in her belly, Wong joked that feminists had been wrong to conquer the right to work. “I don’t wanna lean in, okay? I wanna lie down,” she fervently told the audience. “I want to lie the fuck down. I think feminism is the worst thing that ever happened to women. Our job used to be no job. We had it so good.”

This critique of work sounded almost sacrilegious to me at the time. I’m one generation removed from women who always put their family and home first, who gave up on their careers to take care of their children. And here was a pregnant woman blatantly suggesting that having fought for the right to work was a mistake and that being expected to work is, essentially, a scam of modern womanhood. She continued: “We could have done the smart thing, which would have been to continue playing dumb for the next century and be like…

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Nicole Froio
ZORA
Writer for

Columnist, reporter, researcher, feminist. Views my own. #Latina. Tip jar: paypal.me/NHernandezFroio