A methodological sociological analysis (mostly interviews and surveys) of discontent amongst English housewives in the early 60s. This book was one of the first in England to rally women to their second-class status, through an articulation of the discontent of housewives who saw for themselves no identity other than what others granted them.
Gavron does not make any sweeping statements about women's roles in society, and she is strict in adhering to the parameters of her study, and for this reason the book deserves attention. It's always the case that a woman has had to do (and some say, still do) things twice as well as a man in order to be given credence—Gavron does this admirably.