On this day in Labor History the year was 1975.
That was the day that the National Organization for Women, or NOW, called for a strike by women across the nation.
They called the action, “Alice Doesn’t Day.”
This referred to a critically acclaimed movie by director Martin Scorsese that came out the year before, entitled “Alice Doesn’t Live Here Anymore.”
The main character in the film is Alice Hyatte, who pursues her dream of being a singer after she is widowed.
It was lauded by feminists as a story of women’s empowerment.
NOW used the film title, and asked women to participate with the slogan “Alice doesn’t...you fill in the blank.”
Women were encouraged to participate in the day however they could, including refraining from volunteering, shopping, and if possible working for one day to demonstrate their importance to the economy.
Women who could not skip work, were asked to wear arm bands to show their solidarity with the cause.
In an interview published in the Chicago Tribune, NOW President Karen DeCrow explained, “There is a myth that women in the work force could go home, but if they did our economy would stop. If all the secretaries did not come to work, all things would stop.”
But not all women were excited about the day.
Some anti-feminist women decided to protest the day by wearing pink, baking cookies and performing other stereotypical female tasks.
While NOW called the event a success, Time magazine deemed it “spectacular failure.”
One critique was that the event reflected the white, middle class dominance of the women’s movement.
Working class women, and especially women of color, had a much more difficult time withholding their labor.
September 19 - The End of My Sweet Jennie
September 18 - The Atlanta Compromise
September 17 - Striking in the South
September 16 - NHL Managers Lock Out Players
September 15 - The Invergordon Mutiny
September 14 - The Murder of Ella Mae Wiggins
September 13 - Attica!
September 12 - The Making of a National Treasure
September 11 - The Christiana Riot
September 10 - Minneapolis Printers Organize
September 9 - The Hanapepe Massacre
September 8 - Defying Nazi Occupation
September 7 - The Federal Employees Compensation Act
September 6 - Jane Addams is Born
September 5 - The First Labor Day Parade
September 4 - The Peekskill Riots
September 3 - Locked in to Die
September 2 - Protecting Pensions
September 1 - The Boilermakers
August 31 - The Battle of Blair Mountain
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