Land of ‘Female Eunuch’ welcomes first woman prime minister
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 SYDNEY — Australian women welcomed their first woman prime minister this week, but warned that the unmarried, childless Julia Gillard could face a gender backlash in a land known for its macho culture. Forty years after Australia’s Germaine Greer penned “The  Female Eunuch” which unpicked the traditional role of women, Gillard  was appointed Thursday in an historic moment seen as the realization of a  feminist fantasy. The fact that Gillard was sworn  in by another woman — Governor General Quentin Bryce, the first  woman to hold the post as Queen Elizabeth II’s representative in the  country, appeared the icing on the cake. “It’s  precisely what our mothers — and Germaine! — hoped would one day happen,  as they argued, throughout the 1960s and 1970s, for fundamental changes  to the fabric of the nation,” The Australian’s Caroline Overington  wrote. “Imagine that, 30 years ago: an unmarried  woman, living in sin with a man. Who is a hairdresser. And aspiring to  high office. Forget about it. That’s how far we’ve come.” The change which brings Welsh-born Gillard, 48, to the  top job will shake up the land of “cold beer and untrammeled misogyny,”  according to expatriate writer Kathy Lette. “Let  me say Australian men are quaking in their Ugg boots because even though we’re one of the  first countries in the world to give women the vote, it’s a very sexist  country,” she told Britain’s Sky News. Source: The Daily Tribune URL: http://www.tribuneonline.org/commentary/20100627com3.html | 
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