Documenting Feminist Activism addresses the practical and theoretical challenges and advantages of researching, documenting, and archiving recent and contemporary activists in the feminist and queer movements. In the last few decades, the place and practice of activism has shifted from a physical "headquarters" where activists convene to plan and strategize, to the reality where planning happens at various desks and kitchen tables across the country (or world) and activists then convene at one site for an action (the prime example of this being the WTO protest in Seattle in 1999). So much of the work is taking place in the digital environment and/or within smaller do-it-yourself (DIY) and anarchist subcultures where ideas are often shared via zines and other ephemeral materials. The challenge of the archivist and the scholar, whose work is traditionally paper-based, is to keep up with the changing modes of communication of these individuals and organizations and to make sure these activists' work is not left out of the historical record. Activists, archivists, librarians, and scholars address the following issues and topics: the practical material challenges of documenting and archiving contemporary activism; theoretical perspectives and conversations; online communities and communications; "third wave" feminism/youth and queer cultures/subcultures; the move from paper to digital archives and documents; zines; and the work of activists who employ creative/artistic/cultural approaches to work for social justice.
Examines technology's effect on the role of women, looks at the increased opportunities for women after the turn of the century, and discusses the suffrage movement.
Chinese edition of "Three Guineas"by Virginia Woolf.
Hilary McPhee's Other People's Words is another recent feminist autobiography . It is not primarily an account of an activist's life within the women's movement as such , so is therefore outside the scope of this study .
Telling Tales: Short Stories
Our Hero Has Bad Breath
Presents nineteen early stories by Louisa May Alcott, the nineteenth-century writer famous for "Little Women," including several thrillers that she kept from being republished in her lifetime.
The Politics of Women's Mobilization in the United States: Resources, Opportunities and Political Process
See also editors Katharine Meyer Graham 105–106 Eleanor Medill Patterson 200 Gloria Steinem 241–242 Puck (statue) 118 Pugh, Sarah 285 Puritan doctrine 121 Putnam, George P. 76 Q 414 INDEX R race issues. See also civil rights in.
367–401 ; Frank Stafford and Greg Duncan , “ The Use of Time and Technology by Households in the United States , ” working paper ( Ann Arbor : University of Michigan , ISR , 1977 ) ; John P. Robinson , “ Changes in American's Use of ...
Eighteenth Century Women Playwrights: Susanna Centlivre