The world lost a true trailblazer Monday (August 13) with the death
of author, publisher and businesswoman Helen Gurley Brown. The longtime
Cosmopolitan editor was 90 years old and left behind a lasting legacy on the
publishing industry via her mantra that women could have it all — love, sex and
money — a groundbreaking and controversial ideology she introduced in her 1962
book "Sex and the Single Girl" and expanded upon monthly when she
arrived at Cosmopolitan in 1965.
What struck
me most about the news is not necessarily Gurley's passing — a quick perusal of
her résumé reflects a woman who lived her life to the fullest — but that too
many people, women in particular, have no idea who Gurley was, i.e. the
following exchange I had earlier our office:
Me: "Oh
no! Helen Gurley Brown died."
Female
co-worker: "Who?"
Who, indeed.
The woman's impact on pop culture and women's magazines is a profound one. No
matter how you feel about the evolution of Cosmopolitan and the idea of being a
"Cosmo Girl," both hot topics in their own right, Brown inspired
those conversations. With the publication of "Sex and the Single
Girl" and her editorial role at Cosmo, from 1965 to 1997, Brown thrust the
taboo topic of sex, and the idea that single women had and enjoyed it, into the
mainstream decades before Carrie Bradshaw and her friends on "Sex and the
City." She introduced honest conversations about sex and sexual health
into women's magazines.
While Brown
received plenty of criticism for her pioneering, particularly over the emphasis
she placed on the hot-button feminist issue of living up to impossible
standards of beauty, i.e. looking your best and the importance of being a sex
object, she paired that philosophy with the empowering idea that women were as
equipped as men to go after what they wanted in life.
"The
message was: So you're single. You can still have sex. You can have a great
life. And if you marry, don't just sponge off a man or be the
gold-medal-winning mother," Brown once said. "Don't use men to get
what you want in life — get it for yourself."
And then of
course she also promoted the idea that while women can be as successful as they
want to be, they also "just want to have fun."
"Cosmo
is feminist in that we believe women are just as smart and capable as men and
can achieve anything they want. But it also acknowledges that while work is
important, men are, too. The Cosmo girl absolutely loves men!"
Again, no
matter what you think of how the "Sex and the Single Girl"
conversation has evolved, devolved, progressed or stalled, the point is that
Brown got us talking, and we'll keep doing so for decades to come.
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