Quiet Rumours by unknow

Quiet Rumours by unknow

Author:unknow
Language: eng
Format: epub
ISBN: 9781849351041
Publisher: AK Press


Notes

1.Barbara Ehrenreich, “What is Socialist Feminism?,” Win Magazine, June 3, 1976, p.4.

2.The best of these arguments I’ve encountered are “Socialist Feminism; A Strategy for the Women’s Movement,” by the Hyde Park Chapter, Chicago Women’s Liberation Union, 1972; and Charlotte Bunch, “The Reform Tool Kit,” Quest, 1:1, Summer 1974, pp.37-51.

3.Reports by Polly Anna, Kana Trueblood, C. Corday and S. Tufts, The Fifth Estate, May, 1976, pp. 13, 16. The “ revolution” failed: FEN and its club shut down.

4.People who are interested in reading reports of the conference will find them in almost every feminist or socialist newspaper that appeared in the month or so after July 4th. Speeches by Barbara Ehrenreich, Michelle Russell, and the Berkeley-Oakland Women’s Union are reprinted in Socialist Revolution, No. 26, October-December 1975; and the speech by Charlotte Bunch, “Not for Lesbians Only,” appears in Quest, 2:2, Fall 1975. A thirty-minute audiotape documentary is available from the Great Atlantic Radio Conspiracy, 2743 Maryland Avenue, Baltimore, Maryland 21218.

5.Farrow, “Feminism as Anarchism,” Aurora, 4, 1974, p.9; Kornegger, “Anarchism: The Feminist Connection,” Second Wave, 4: 1, Spring 1975, p.31; Leighton, “Anarcho-Feminism and Louise Michel,” Black Rose, 1, April 1974, p. 14.

6.December, 1, 1970, p.11.

7.Lilith’s Manifesto, from the Women’s Majority Union of Seattle, 1969. Reprinted in Robin Morgan (ed.), Sisterhood is Powerful. N.Y.: Random House, 1970, p.529.

8.The best and most detailed description of the parallels between radical feminism and anarchist feminism is found in Kornegger, op cit.

9.The speech is currently available from KNOW, Inc.

10.The Second Wave, 2:1, 1972.

11.“What Future for Leadership?,” Quest, 2:4, Spring 1976, pp.2-13.

12.Strasbourg Situationists, Once the Universities Were Respected, 1968, p.38.

13.Carol Hanisch, “The Personal is Political,” Notes from the Second Year. N.Y.: Radical Feminism, 1970, pp. 76-78.

14.Leighton, op cit.

15.Point-Blank!, “The Changing of the Guard,” in Point-Blank, October 1972, p.16.

16.For one of the most illuminating of these early analyses, see Meredith Tax, “Woman and Her Mind: The Story of Everyday Life,” Boston: Bread and Roses Publication, 1970.

17.Carole Oles, “The Gift,” in 13th Moon, II: 1, 1974, p. 39.

18.Tax, op cit., p. 13.

19.Marge Piercy, excerpt from “Contribution to Our Museum,” in Living in the Open. N.Y.: Knopf, 1976, pp.74-75.



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