----- 姐妹情谊和后:英国妇女解放运动的口述历史,1968年至今
This ground-breaking history of the UK Womenâs Liberation Movement explores the individual and collective memories of women at its heart. Spanning at least two generations and four nations, and moving through the tumultuous decades from the 1970s to the present, the narrative is powered by feminist oral history, notably the British Libraryâs Sisterhood and After: The Womenâs Liberation Oral History Project. The book mines these precious archives to bring fresh insight into the lives of activists and the campaigns and ideas they mobilised. It navigates still-contested questions of class, race, violence, and upbringingâas well as the intimacies, sexualities and passions that helped fire womenâs liberationâand shows why many feminists still regard notions of âequalityâ or even âequal rightsâ as insufficient. It casts new light on iconic campaigns and actions in what is sometimes simplified as feminismâs âsecond waveâ, and enlivens a narrative too easily framed by ideological abstraction with candid, insightful, sometimes painful personal accounts of national and less well-known women activists. They describe lives shaped not only by structures of race, class, gender, sexuality and physical ability, but by education, age, love and cultural taste. At the same time, they offer extraordinary insights into feminist lifestyles and domestic pleasures, and the crossovers and conflicts between feminists. The work draws on oral historyâs strength as creative method, as seen with its conclusion, where readers are urged to enter the archives of feminist memory and use what they find there to shape their own political futures.
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