No permanent waves: recasting histories of U.S. feminism
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Bibliographische Detailangaben
Format: Elektronisch E-Book
Sprache:English
Veröffentlicht: New Brunswick, N.J. Rutgers University Press ©2010
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Online-Zugang:FAW01
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Beschreibung:Includes bibliographical references and index
From Seneca Falls to suffrage? Reimagining a "master" narrative in U.S. women's history / Nancy A. Hewitt -- Multiracial feminism: recasting the chronology of second wave feminism / Becky Thompson -- Black feminisms and human agency / Ula Y. Taylor -- "We have a long, beautiful history": Chicana feminist trajectories and legacies / Marisela R. Chávez -- Unsettling "third wave feminism": feminist waves, intersectionality, and identity politics in retrospect / Leela Fernandes -- Overthrowing the "monopoly of the pulpit": race and the rights of church women in the nineteenth-century United States / Martha S. Jones -- Labor feminists and President Kennedy's Commission on women / Dorothy Sue Cobble -- Expanding the boundaries of the women's movement: black feminism and the struggle for welfare rights / Premilla Nadasen -- Rethinking global sisterhood: peace activism and women's Orientalism / Judy Tzu-Chun Wu -- Living a feminist lifestyle: the intersection of theory and action in a lesbian feminist collective / Anne M. Valk -- Strange bedfellows: building feminist coalitions around sex work in the 1970s / Stephanie Gilmore -- From sisterhood to girlie culture: closing the great divide between second and third wave cultural agendas / Leandra Zarnow -- Staking claims to independence: Jennie Collins, Aurora Phelps, and the Boston Working Women's League, 1865-1877 / Lara Vapnek -- "I had not seen women like that before": intergenerational feminism in New York City's tenant movement / Roberta S. Gold -- The hidden history of affirmative action: working women's struggles in the 1970s and the gender of class / Nancy MacLean -- U.S. feminism: Grrrl style!: Youth (sub)cultures and the technologics of the third wave / Ednie Kaeh Garrison -- "Under construction": identifying foundations of hip-hop feminism and exploring bridges between black second wave and hip hop feminisms / Whitney A. Peoples
No Permanent Waves boldly enters the ongoing debates over the utility of the "wave" metaphor for capturing the complex history of women's rights by offering fresh perspectives on the diverse movements that comprise U.S. feminism, past and present. Seventeen essays-both original and reprinted-address continuities, conflicts, and transformations among women's movements in the United States from the early nineteenth century through today
Beschreibung:1 Online-Ressource (xii, 453 pages)
ISBN:0813549175
9780813549170

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