Public Women, Public Words: A Documentary History of American Feminism, 2. sējums

Pirmais vāks
Dawn Keetley, John Pettegrew
Rowman & Littlefield, 1997 - 566 lappuses
This final volume in the Public Women, Public Words series focuses on what has come to be called the second wave of American feminism. It traces the resurgence of feminism in the late 1960s--from Betty Friedan and the National Organization for Women to the anarchist and lesbian identity dimensions of radical feminism. Including topics such as sexual autonomy, abortion, the Equal Rights Amendment, and the black-feminist resistance to the white-dominated second wave, this volume reflects the unprecedented range of women's issues taken up by feminists during the 1970s and beyond. Volume III also charts the great diffusion of feminism with separate sections on multicultural feminism and the feminist presence in media and pop culture. Finally, through the recent writings of feminist intellectuals, it looks toward a third feminist wave for the new millennium. Public Women, Public Words: A Documentary History of American Feminism provides a comprehensive view of the many strands of feminist thought and actions and is essential for every women's studies and feminism collection.

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I Liberal Feminism Womens Liberation and the Emergence of Radical Feminism
1
Betty Friedan The Problem That Has No Name 1963
5
NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN Statement of Purpose 1967
14
ANNE KOEDT Women and the Radical Movement 1968
14
REDSTOCKINGS Redstockings Manifesto 1969
16
THE FEMINISTS A Political Organization to Annihilate Sex Roles 1969
17
NEW YORK RADICAL FEMINISTS Politics of the Ego A Manifesto 1969
19
WESTCHESTER RADICAL FEMINISTS Statement of Purpose 1972
22
NATIONAL ORGANIZATON FOR WOMEN ERA Position Paper 1967
247
National Organization for Women ERA Declaration of State of Emergency 1978
254
GLORIA STEINEM What Women Want An Introductory Statement 1978
256
NATIONAL COMMISSION ON THE OBSERVANCE OF INTERNATIONAL WOMENS YEAR Declaration of American Women 1977
263
NAN BAUERMAGLIN Journal of a Womens Course 1975
264
GERDA LERNER New Approaches to the Study of Women in American History 1969
276
LINDA GORDON What Should Womens Historians Do Politics Social Theory and Womens History 1978
282
Ellen Carol DuBois The Last Suffragist An Intellectual and Political Autobiography 1998
287

APHRA Preamble 1969
23
ASIAN WOMEN This Isnt One of Those Blonds That Anyone Can Pick Up in a Supermarket 1971
24
Women A Journal of Liberation Founding Editorial 1969
26
Up from Under Founding Editorial 1970
27
ROBIN MORGAN Goodbye to All That 1970
29
SIREN A JOURNAL OF ANARCHOFEMINISM Who We Are 1970
34
SIREN A JOURNAL OF ANARCHOFEMINISM What the CounterCulture Isnt Just 1970
35
Women of Youth Against War and Racism Specific Characteristics of Womens Liberation 1970
36
Female Liberation A Statement About Female Liberation 1971
38
Change Who We Are 1972
39
A Personal Report from Ms 1972
41
II Black Feminism
47
PAULI MURRAY The Negro Woman in the Quest for Equality 1964
53
FRANCES M BEAL Double Jeopardy To Be Black and Female 1970
56
Black Sisters Birth Control Pills and Black Children 1968
62
PATRICIA ROBINSON Poor Black Women 1968
64
Charlayne Hunter Many Blacks Wary of Womens Liberation Movement 1970
65
Toni Morrison What the Black Woman Thinks About Womens Lib 1971
67
COMBAHEE RIVER COLLECTIVE A Black Feminist Statement 1977
73
MICHELE WALLACE Black Macho and the Myth of the Superwoman 1979
79
ALICE WALKER In Search of Our Mothers Gardens 1974
88
ALICE WALKER SANDRA FLOWERS CHRISTINE BOND AND AUDRE LORDE Other Voices Other Moods 1979
93
III Lesbian Identities and Critiques of Heterosexuality
99
RADICALESBIANS The WomanIdentified Woman 1970
105
Anne Koedt Interview Loving Another Woman 1971
108
Rita Mae Brown The Shape of Things to Come 1972
113
Peggy Kornegger Judy Antonelli and Marianne Rubenstein What Is a Lesbian? 1977
115
Adrienne Rich Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence 19801986
117
Charlotte Bunch Speaking Out Reaching Out 19771985
123
ANNE KOEDT The Myth of the Vaginal Orgasm 1970
129
AUDRE LORDE Uses of the Erotic The Erotic as Power 1978
134
Susan Griffin Rape The AilAmerican Crime 1971
138
BARBARA MEHRHOF AND PAMELA KEARON Rape An Act of Terror 1971
149
ANGELA Y DAVIS Rape Racism and the Myth of the Black Rapist 1981
151
Some SecondWave Issues
155
KATHIE SARACHILD A Program for Feminist Consciousness Raising 1968
163
Carol Hanisch A Critique of the Miss America Protest 1968
165
VALERIE SOLANAS SCUM Manifesto 1967
168
JAYNE WEST Are Men Really the Enemy? 1970
174
PAMELA KEARON ManHating 1970
176
DANA DENSMORE Who Is Saying Men Are the Enemy? 1970
178
SUSAN PASCALE RACHEL MOON AND LESLIE B TANNER Karate as SelfDefense for Women 1970
180
SWITCHBORED Poems and Articles 1969
184
PAT MAINARDI The Politics of Housework 19681970
186
Alix Kates Shulman The Shulmans Marriage Agreement 1971
190
Lisa Leghorn ChildCare for the Child 1970
191
Louise Gross and Phyllis MacEwan On Day Care 1970
193
JOHNNIE TILLMON WITH NANCY STEFFAN Welfare Is a Womens Issue 1972
197
WOMENS HEALTH COLLECTIVE The MaleFeasance of Health 1970
200
THE GROUP II Are Our Doctors Pigs? 1970
202
Roe v Wade Brief for Appellants 1970
204
Roe v Wade Brief Amicus Curiae on Behalf of New Women Lawyers Womens Health and Abortion Project Inc National Abortion Action Coalition 1...
211
WEBSTER v REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH SERVICES The Historians Brief 1988
219
LINDA GORDON AND ALLEN HUNTER Sex Family and the New Right AntiFeminism as a Political Force 1977
233
Of Continuity and Discontent LateTwentiethCentury Feminism
295
1 Feminism in a Multicultural World
297
CHERRIE MORAGA Preface to This Bridge Called My Back1981
304
MERLE Woo Letter to Ma 1981
308
LETTY COTTIN POGREBIN AntiSemitism in the Womens Movement 1982
313
RAYNA GREEN Diary of a NativeAmerican Feminist 1982
326
Paula Gunn Allen Who Is Your Mother? Red Roots of White Feminism 1986
329
BELL HOOKS Third World Diva Girls Politics of Feminist Solidarity 1990
336
Gloria Anzaldua La conciencia de la mestizoTowards a New Consciousness 1987
343
June Jordan Where Is the Sisterhood? 1996
350
UNITED NATIONS FOURTH WORLD CONFERENCE ON WOMEN Beijing Declaration 1995
352
HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON Remarks to the NGO Forum on Women 1995
355
REBECCA ADAMSON VERONICA CHAMBERS URVASHI VAID AND MARI J MATSUDA Getting There 1997
359
II Pop Culture Feminism
366
NATIONAL ORGANIZATION FOR WOMEN Task Force on Image of Women in Mass Media 1967
371
Camille Paglia Madonna I and Madonna II 19901991
372
ANGELA JOHNSON Confessions of a Pop Culture Junkie 1994
377
KATHI MAIO Film Women Who Murder for the Man 1991
379
WENDY BRYAN Xenatopia1998
382
TOM LANHAM Postmodern Sisters 1993
384
CLAUDIA DREIFUS Cokie Roberts Nina Totenberg and Linda Wertheimer 1994
390
Lynda Hinkle The Smash FAQ 1998
394
LISA JERVIS Imperfect Beauty 1998
395
HAYLEY NELSON Dating Is Tired Marriage Is Wired 1998
397
WOMEN HALTING ONLINE ABUSE About WHOA 1998
398
HEATHER IRWIN Shouting into the Vacuum 1998
401
VIRGINIA EUBANKS A Womans Place in Cyberspace 1998
402
Virginia Eubanks Hacking Barbie with the Barbie Liberation Organization 1998
404
Melissa Klein Duality and Redefinition Young Feminism and the Alternative Music Community 1997
407
RACHEL ORVIRO I Am a Girl 1998
418
PUNKGRRRL I Wanna Riot 1998
421
JOAN MORGAN The Bad Girls of HipHop 1997
422
NANCY COULTER The Lilith Fair A Celebration of Women in Music 1997
423
ANDREA DWORKIN Dear Bill and Hillary 1998
424
III Toward a Third Wave
426
DOROTHY WICKENDEN What NOW? The Womens Movement Looks Beyond Equality 1986
436
BARBARA EHRENREICH Beyond Gender Equality Toward the New Feminism 1993
443
KATHA POLLITT Are Women Morally Superior to Men? 1992
446
WENDY KAMINER Feminisms Identity Crisis 1993
454
BELL HOOKS GLORIA STEINEM URVASHI Vaid and Naomi Wolf Lets Get Real about FeminismThe Backlash the Myths the Movement 1993
463
KAREN LEHRMAN AND OTHERS Off Courseand Responses 1993
472
Susan Faludi Im Not a Feminist but I Play One on TV 1995
479
BELL HOOKS Black Students Who Reject Feminism 1994
486
LISA MARIA HOGELAND Fear of Feminism Why Young Women Get the Willies 1994
488
CELESTE HUTCHINS CHRISTI DENTON TAMERA FERRO AND DANICA NUCCITELLI Neofeminism1998
492
ANASTASIA HIGGINBOTHAM Shall We Dance? 1997
494
REBECCA WALKER Becoming the Third Wave 1992
497
BELL HOOKS FeminismIts a Black Thang1992
499
Kristal Brent Zook A Manifesto of Sorts for a Black Feminist Movement 1995
500
BARBARA JONES ANITA BLAIR BARBARA EHRENREICH JEANNE LEWIS ARLIE RUSSELL HOCHSCHILD AND ELIZABETH PERLE MCK...
505
Index
519
About the Editors
540
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