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Reviewer: Vaticidalprophet (talk · contribs) 08:55, 3 July 2023 (UTC)
I've been idly watching the First Ladies GT project -- so, of course, I had to pick the biggest one currently up.
Having looked over (without combing through) this article a few times prior to committing, I'll make some notes that have previously stood out to me before launching into a full review sometime in the next few days:
Bush was generally popular as first lady.[143][95]), though most of these are okay.
Full review to come. Vaticidalprophet 08:55, 3 July 2023 (UTC)
Starting to run through this now.
she took her mother's worldview and financial habits as examples to avoid-- examples of this?
While in college, she focused the social and athletic aspectsaccidentally a word.
part time jobis usually hyphenated
part-time.
Vaticidalprophet 14:36, 10 July 2023 (UTC)
though the boredom was severe enough at times that she took up needlepoint-- makes needlepoint sound like a punishment :) This and its preceding should probably be restructured a little -- I'd imagine that life on the campaign travel is something with busy uptime but very long periods of downtime? This could then be expressed as discussing how needlepoint and possibly others were hobbies she picked up in that downtime.
the campaign of her husband's opponent in the primary election? (This is a little clunky still, unfortunately.)
She actively campaigned for her husband, as she had in previous electionsis a pleonasm.
George ran for the U.S. Senate again in 1970again skews EGG-y -- here you could just expand the pipe to include "ran for the U.S. Senate again".
it was a relief to both of the Bushessentence also feels like a pleonasm -- surely they didn't campaign for a position they didn't want?
Mrs. Bush would "confess" that in the mid-seventies, "I went through a difficult time, really, because suddenly women's lib had made me feel my life had been wasted."
"I think part of it was that the children were all gone and part of if it was women's lib which made that woman who stayed home feel that she had somehow or another been a failure," Barbara said.
Just prior to the convention, she had also stated empathically that she did not believe the issue of abortion should be addressed in its platform and that it was "a private matter," suggesting she was "pro-choice" and against the overturning of Roe vs. Wade, a fact she confirmed afterwards in her post-White House memoirs.
where first lady Nancy Reagan reduced the traditional social roles of the vice president and the second lady-- clarity?
carried out her intention to promotecan just be 'intent to promote', but even moreso, can just be 'promoted' ("promoted her chosen cause", if you want).
Vaticidalprophet 11:59, 22 July 2023 (UTC)
Sorry about the delay -- was waiting on a response to the source queries, then got consumed by coordinating the drive, whoops. To repay for my sins, :) I'll go through as much here as I can. Also -- I added Anna Harrison to the old nominations list, so hopefully you'll get a new reviewer for her soon.
caused her to undergo weight lossis an unnatural-sounding phrasing compared to "caused her to lose weight". I'm reading the intent here as "highlighting that the weight loss wasn't intentional", but that's gotten across by the part where it's caused by a disease.
Bush loved the White House, admiring both the aesthetics and the historical significance of each room-- will readers know what the rooms all are and understand their aesthetics and historical significance? Looking at the source, it refers to specific historical events she found interesting that might also be of interest to readers. (It's also not completely clear that her considering the house 'beautiful' is a statement of its physical aesthetics, as she explicitly calls out one room as not-so.)
The trust raises funds for the ongoing refurbishment and restoration of the White House-- we may assume that readers know what house is being referred to
so she wouldn't feel trapped or isolated-- to avoid the contraction, this could be rephrased as "to avoid feeling trapped or isolated"
and she felt that-- "feeling that" is less stilted
When dealing with the press, she imposed her policy of "if I said it, I said it", in which was not allowed to explain or justify her statements to the press.There's an obvious missing part of this sentence, but the whole thing feels a little confused. "Imposed her policy" leads the reader to the conclusion this was intrinsically motivated, but "not allowed" leads to the conclusion it was extrinsic. Something like "took a stance" or "took a philosophy" is a more natural phrasing than "imposed a policy" unless you explicitly want the implication that she enforced this on interviewers (which you might!), and "refused to explain/justify/elaborate/any other term" less contextually confusing than "not allowed to".
The speech was listed as #45 in American Rhetoric's Top 100 Speeches of the 20th Century-- is this a high honour or just some guy's list? Genuinely can't tell from context. (Site has the exact kind of 90s web design that could go either way.)
her influence in the administration included multiple cabinet appointments-- any more about what appointments, and where this was on a spectrum from "making suggestions" to "basically doing the whole thing"? That's a fairly significant claim without further context.
The campaign efforts were complicated by the early 1990s recession and the president's subsequent drop in approval ratings,should (probably?) be a full stop instead of a comma.
Bush had gone some time without cooking or driving a car: two skills that she was forced to reacquire-- colon seems an odd choice here compared to a comma
Barbara and her husband did not take a prominent role in the campaign so as to avoid overshadowing him-- just 'to' rather than 'so as to' is sufficient
Barbara's primary role was traveling with other women associated with the campaign in the "W Stands for Women" tour to increase his share of the women's voteis phrased in a way that almost implies...it did that. We don't know whether it did that or not, though most of these sorts of campaigns don't do much. This should probably be rephrased if there's no evidence that campaign had an effect.
Barbara and George were on a plane when the September 11 attacks occurred-- I'd expect to see "on a flight". The source specifies they were going to Minnesota and diverted to Wisconsin, which may be worth adding.
the pride that she felt for her son amidst her confusion-- the source refers to a statement about how 9/11-generally was shocking/confusing for the population. I think "amidst her confusion" is overly-personal/sounds like she's talking about a personal concrete concern rather than the more abstract post-9/11 zeitgeist.
In 2002 she became an alumna initiate of the Texas Eta chapter of Pi Beta Phi at Texas A&M University. Bush chose this university due to it being the location of her husband's Presidential Library. She was also a member of the Junior League of Houston.Both of these are confusing if you don't know much about the organizations. Alumni are usually people who attended an institution -- is it common for alumni initiates to Greek societies to be people from somewhere else entirely? What do alumni initiates do, anyway? Also worth contextualizing what the Junior League is and does.
As it looked more likely that her son would launch an invasion of Iraq, she expressed worry that the decision may be a mistakeis abrupt, and should have some contextualization of the war tensions.
and she underwent aortic valve replacement surgery in March 2009seems it'd be less choppy as a separate sentence. While it's good to avoid proseline, this seems like a little too intentional an attempt to avoid starting a sentence with "In 2009" in an article certainly not at risk of proseline.
She later recanted this statement in 2015-- 'later' is unneeded
but she believed this was in line with the Republican Partyis a little too modern -- as Bush herself demonstrates, moderate Republicans were still plenty common at this point. More concerningly, I don't think the source supports a straightforward statement she was socially liberal. She considered her positions in line with contemporary moderate Republicans, or moreso "contemporary modern Republicans in line with her" -- compressing "she considered both herself and the party socially liberal" down to "she considered herself socially liberal but thought that was compatible with being a Republican" does not seem supported.
Bush was highly critical of Donald Trump since her own time as first lady in 1990-- guessing this means 'as a person', given he wasn't a politican yet? (Future-proofing -- the more time goes on the more readers will only know him as a politician...)
100,000 letters each yeareach year is decontextualized. Is this high, low, normal for a first lady?
Bush was the last first lady from the generation in which women were expected to become housewives rather than seek an education and a career.This is so intensely variable by upbringing and social context that I'm not comfortable with us stating this as 'a clear thing'. It is perfectly possible to imagine a future first lady from a culture or subculture where women are emphatically still expected to be housewives, and the degree of 'housewife expectations throughout history' has varied a lot in turn.
In the 2014 survey, historians ranked Bush 5th among 20th and 21st century American first ladies that they felt "could have done more".This is an ambiguous statement (do first ladies need to 'do more'? couldn't all of them have 'done more' of something?), and the linked source doesn't really expand on what it means, but it's very brief in general. Does the organization that does these rankings have any more info on how these categories are determined?
That should be the lot of it, and again, sorry about the wait. Vaticidalprophet 03:18, 6 August 2023 (UTC)
it doesn't so much seem to me that she was "questioning" her life as that she was worried that the movement presented her life as a housewife as "inferior" or "wasted" [...] the current presentation sounds more 'positive' than what the sources say).
Bush determined that the protest was "much ado about nothing" by twenty-year-old, 'determined' seems slightly over-objective about a subjective opinion.
The Bushes' return to Washington in late 1975 caused Barbara to reconsider, perhaps for the first time in her life, the choices she had made. The feminist movement, reaching a peak with its talk of consciousness raising and self-fulfillment, appeared to have its sharp arrows aimed at precisely the kind of life that Barbara Bush, then aged 50, had led. Her children, now grown to adulthood or nearly so, needed her less, and her husband’s job at the Central Intelligence Agency did not permit his sharing many work problems with her. Like other women of her generation, she began to reexamine her past and think about what to do with the rest of her life.Thebiguglyalien (talk) 03:09, 7 August 2023 (UTC)
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