000 01431 a2200241 4500
008 041203s xx 000 0 eng
022 _a1522-3248;
050 _aAC1.S5
082 _a050
100 _aAli, Lorraine,
245 4 _aThe Secret Lives of Wives.
_cLorraine Ali and Lisa Miller.
260 _bNewsweek,
_c2004.
440 _aSIRS Enduring Issues 2005.
_nArticle 77,
_pHuman Relations,
_x1522-3248;
500 _aArticles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2005.
500 _aOriginally Published: The Secret Lives of Wives, July 12, 2004; pp. 46+.
520 _a"Much has changed since Emma Bovary chose suicide with arsenic over living her life branded an adulteress--humiliated, impoverished and stripped of her romantic ideals....The reality is this: American women today have more opportunity to fool around than ever; when they do fool around, they're more likely to tell their friends about it, and those friends are more likely to lend them a sympathetic ear." (NEWSWEEK) This article examines how growing numbers of women are cheating on their spouses without some of the negative reactions and consequences formerly associated with adultery.
599 _aRecords created from non-MARC resource.
650 _aAdultery
650 _aMarried women
650 _aWives
710 _aProQuest Information and Learning Company
_tSIRS Enduring Issues 2005,
_pHuman Relations.
_x1522-3248;
942 _c UKN
999 _c36613
_d36613