Gloria Steinem? Joe King? Anonymous Black Feminist?
Question for Quote Investigator: Being placed on a pedestal has a serious drawback according to the following astute metaphorical amplification:
A pedestal is a prison, like any other small space.
Would you please explore the provenance of this expression which is often attributed to the prominent feminist Gloria Steinem?
Reply from Quote Investigator: The earliest match located by QI appeared in an advertisement for a realty company written by Joe King and published in “The Yuma Daily Sun” of Yuma, Arizona in September 1974. Emphasis added to excerpts by QI:1
The man who didn’t want his wife to work has been succeeded by the man who asks about her chances of getting a raise . . .
A pedestal is as much a prison as any small space . . .
Do you feel like you’re in prison?
Kids growing up and cramped for space?
Really put your wife on a pedestal — let HER pick out a larger house.
The advertisement contained other commonplace observations:
You can’t expect a person to see eye to eye with you when you’re looking down on him . . .
You can’t spend yourself rich any more than you can drink yourself sober . . .
Thus, QI conjectures that the saying about pedestals was already in circulation with an anonymous ascription.
In March 1976 a columnist in a Dubois, Pennsylvania newspaper credited Gloria Steinem with the remark:2
A Thought: A pedestal is as much a prison as any small space. (Gloria Steinem)
Steinem used the saying during interviews and within articles, but she disclaimed authorship as shown below via selected citations in chronological order.
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