The story follows Joanna Eberhart, a talented photographer and semi-liberated woman who moves with her family to the idyllic suburb of Stepford, Connecticut. She soon notices a disturbing trend: all the local housewives are eerily subservient, obsessed with housework, and completely devoid of intellectual interests or personal ambition. As Joanna investigates, she uncovers a sinister plot by the "Men’s Association" to replace their independent wives with compliant, robotic doubles.
Written during the Second Wave Feminist movement, the story explores the male anxieties of the era. It depicts a literal "erasure" of women’s identities in favor of a 1950s domestic fantasy. The Stepford Wives
The wives are literally turned into products—designed to be beautiful, efficient, and silent. Cultural Impact The story follows Joanna Eberhart, a talented photographer
The term has transcended the book and film to become a common English idiom. It is used to describe a woman who appears overly submissive, "perfect" to a fault, or someone who seems to be acting in a robotic, conformist manner. Adaptations Written during the Second Wave Feminist movement, the
A high-budget remake starring Nicole Kidman. This version took a more comedic, "campy" approach, which received mixed reviews for softening the original’s dark message. Why It Still Matters