Rebecca Greer

Rebecca Ellen Greer (born 1936) is an American nonfiction writer and also served as an editor for Woman's Day magazine.[1][2]

Rebecca Greer
Born1936
OccupationWriter and Editor for Woman's Day
NationalityAmerican
Literary movementFeminism

Biography

Rebecca Greer majored in communications at the University of Florida. She graduated with a bachelor of science degree from the College of Journalism and Communications in 1957.[3] In 1998, she was named a distinguished alumna of the College of Journalism and Communications at the University of Florida.[4] The University of Florida maintains a collection of her manuscripts in their Special and Area Studies Library.[5]

Her non-fiction book Why Isn't a Nice Girl Like You Married? (1969) was a bestseller and seminal book on feminism. She taught nonfiction writing at the New School for Social Research.[6]

Published books

  • Why Isn't a Nice Girl Like You Married? (1969)
  • How To Live Rich When You're Not (1975)
  • No Rocking Chair For Me[7] (2004)
gollark: Ah, good, it seems like they do for at least some.
gollark: For all car-related data harvesting.
gollark: Do they actually have an opt out?
gollark: I don't actually have a car, but it seems like with the increasing amount of computers in them and requirements for mobile connectivity and such in them, they're moving away from this.
gollark: Generally, I think my things should do what I want and not enforce artificial lockouts on things, randomly break unrepairably, report data back to whoever, run unauditable proprietary software, or do weird stuff in the background.

See also

References

  1. About Rebecca Greer
  2. Source
  3. UF: Additional info about Greer
  4. Alumni of the 1990s
  5. UF library Greer collection
  6. "Women in the News," The Virgin Islands Daily News, Mar 12, 1976. Found at Google news. Retrieved February 8, 2011.
  7. about one of Greer's books


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