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A whole new world: Global revolution and Australian social movements in the long Sixties Jon Piccini BA Honours (1st Class) A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at The University of Queensland in 2013 School of History, Philosophy, Religion & Classics Abstract This thesis explores Australian social movements during the long Sixties through a transnational prism, identifying how the flow of people and ideas across borders was central to the growth and development of diverse campaigns for political change. By making use of a variety of sources—from archives and government reports to newspapers, interviews and memoirs—it identifies a broadening of the radical imagination within movements seeking rights for Indigenous Australians, the lifting of censorship, women’s liberation, the ending of the war in Vietnam and many others. It locates early global influences, such as the Chinese Revolution and increasing consciousness of anti-racist struggles in South Africa and the American South, and the ways in which ideas from these and other overseas sources became central to the practice of Australian social movements. This was a process aided by activists’ travel. Accordingly, this study analyses the diverse motives and experiences of Australian activists who visited revolutionary hotspots from China and Vietnam to Czechoslovakia, Algeria, France and the United States: to protest, to experience or to bring back lessons. While these overseas exploits, breathlessly recounted in articles, interviews and books, were transformative for some, they also exposed the limits of what a transnational politics could achieve in a local setting. Australia also became a destination for the period’s radical activists, provoking equally divisive responses. -
Transgender History / by Susan Stryker
u.s. $12.95 gay/Lesbian studies Craving a smart and Comprehensive approaCh to transgender history historiCaL and Current topiCs in feminism? SEAL Studies Seal Studies helps you hone your analytical skills, susan stryker get informed, and have fun while you’re at it! transgender history HERE’S WHAT YOU’LL GET: • COVERAGE OF THE TOPIC IN ENGAGING AND AccESSIBLE LANGUAGE • PhOTOS, ILLUSTRATIONS, AND SIDEBARS • READERS’ gUIDES THAT PROMOTE CRITICAL ANALYSIS • EXTENSIVE BIBLIOGRAPHIES TO POINT YOU TO ADDITIONAL RESOURCES Transgender History covers American transgender history from the mid-twentieth century to today. From the transsexual and transvestite communities in the years following World War II to trans radicalism and social change in the ’60s and ’70s to the gender issues witnessed throughout the ’90s and ’00s, this introductory text will give you a foundation for understanding the developments, changes, strides, and setbacks of trans studies and the trans community in the United States. “A lively introduction to transgender history and activism in the U.S. Highly readable and highly recommended.” SUSAN —joanne meyerowitz, professor of history and american studies, yale University, and author of How Sex Changed: A History of Transsexuality In The United States “A powerful combination of lucid prose and theoretical sophistication . Readers STRYKER who have no or little knowledge of transgender issues will come away with the foundation they need, while those already in the field will find much to think about.” —paisley cUrrah, political -
GLOBAL-LOCAL INTERACTIONS: FIRST THREE DECADES of the WOMEN's MOVEMENT in BANGLADESH* Ayesha Banu
Journal of the Asiatic Society of Bangladesh (Hum.), Vol. 60(2), 2015, pp. 203-230 GLOBAL-LOCAL INTERACTIONS: FIRST THREE DECADES OF THE WOMEN’S MOVEMENT IN BANGLADESH* ** Ayesha Banu Abstract The main focus of this paper is to look into the feminist formulations with particular emphasis on global–local interactions and its impact in shaping the contours of the women’s movement in Bangladesh. The time frame of this study covers the first three decades of Bangladesh i.e. 1971-2000. The paper reveals that the feminist formulations are not the sole prerogative of the women’s organisations or the feminists alone. There are several sites and platforms where feminist articulations are made. The women’s movement, while making its own articulations, is also engaged in a dialogue with other actors in the wider domain of feminism. Among other actors and sites of feminist formulations, the state and global feminism have come out as two major sites, with which the women’s movement is constantly interacting, shaping and being shaped in its journey of feminist developments. This study made use of qualitative research methodology, conducting in-depth interviews and collecting life stories of key protagonists of the women’s movement, and blending such primary data with secondary source materials. Introduction This paper attempts to look at the interface taking place at a macro level, highlighting the nature of interaction from a broader perspective in relation to the state, global feminism and development of autonomous feminist voices at the local level. The purpose here is to look into feminist formulations around the world to understand what impact these global scenarios have had on local level feminist formulations. -
Reimagining Asia: Indian and Australian Women Crossing Borders∗
Modern Asian Studies 53, 4 (2019) pp. 1183–1221. C Cambridge University Press 2018. This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. doi:10.1017/S0026749X17000920 First published online 7 December 2018 Reimagining Asia: Indian and Australian women crossing borders∗ HEATHER GOODALL University of Technology Sydney Email: [email protected] DEVLEENA GHOSH University of Technology Sydney Email: [email protected] Abstract The decades from the 1940stothe1960s were ones of increasing contacts between women of India and Australia. These were not built on a shared British colonial history, but on commitments to visions circulating globally of equality between races, sexes, and classes. Kapila Khandvala from Bombay and Lucy Woodcock from Sydney were two women who met during such campaigns. Interacting roughly on an equal footing, they were aware of each other’s activism in the Second World War and the emerging Cold War. Khandvala and Woodcock both made major contributions to the women’s movements of their countries, yet have been largely forgotten in recent histories, as have links between their countries. We analyse their interactions, views, and practices on issues to which they devoted their lives: women’s rights, progressive education, and peace. Their beliefs and practices on each were shaped by their respective local contexts, although they shared ideologies that were circulating internationally. These kept them in contact over many years, during which Kapila built networks that brought Australians into the sphere of Indian women’s awareness, while Lucy, in addition to her continuing contacts with Kapila, travelled to China and consolidated links between Australian and Chinese women in Sydney. -
A Current Listing of Contents Di
a current listing of contents dI Volume 7 I Number 4 Winter 1988 Published by Susan Searing, Women's Studies Librarian University of Wisconsin System 112A Memorial Library 728 State Street Madison, Wisconsin 53706 (608) 263- 5754 a current listing of contents Volume 7, Number 4 Winter 1988 Periodical 1i terature is the cutting edge of women's scholarship, feminist theory, and much of women's culture. Feminist Periodicals: A Current Listing of Contents is published by the Office of the University of Wisconsin System Women's Studies Librarian on a quarterly basis with the intent of increasing public awareness of feminist periodicals. It is our hope that Feminist Periodicals wi 11 serve several purposes: to keep the reader abreast of current topics in feminist literature; to increase readers' famil iarity with a wide spectrum of feminist periodicals; and to provide the requisite bibliographic information should a reader wish to subscribe to a journal or to obtain a particular article at her library or through interlibrary loan. (Users will need to be aware of the limitations of the new copyright law with regard to photocopying of copyrighted materials.) Table of contents pages from current issues of major feminist journals are reproduced in each issue of Feminist Periodicals, preceded by a comprehensive annotated listing of all journals we have selected. As publication schedules vary enormously, not every periodical will have table of contents pages reproduced in each issue of FP. The annotated listing provides the following information on each journal : Year of first publication. Frequency of pub1 icati on. U.S. -
Feminism in Bangladesh: 1971-2000 Voices from Women's Movement
Feminism in Bangladesh: 1971-2000 Voices from Women’s Movement ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Thesis To obtain the degree of PhD from University of Dhaka Supervisor Dr. Najma Chowdhury Emeritus Professor, Founding Chair, Department of Women and Gender Studies University of Dhaka Co Supervisor Dr. Firdous Azim Professor, Chairperson of the Department of English and Humanities BRAC University, Dhaka Submitted by Ayesha Banu Associate Professor Department of Women and Gender Studies University of Dhaka Registration No and Session: 215 (2012-13) (re) Affiliated Hall: Bangladesh-Kuwait Maitri Hall, University of Dhaka Date of Submission PhD Committee Convenor Dr. Meghna Guhathakurta, Director, Research Initiative, Bangladesh (RIB), Dhaka. Members Dr. Najma Chowdhury, Supervisor, Emeritus Professor, Department of Women and Gender Studies, University of Dhaka, Dhaka. External Member: Dr. Maitrayee Chaudhuri, Professor, Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU), New Delhi. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- The PhD Programme was supported by the project entitled ―Institutionalising the Department of Women‘s Studies‖, funded by the Royal Netherlands Embassy and managed by the Department of Women and Gender Studies, University of Dhaka and Institute of Development Studies (ISS), The Hague. II Table of Content List of Figures ...................................................................................................................... -
Protest, Justice, and Transnational Organizing SAN FRANCISCO, CA 2020 NWSA Chair and Director Meeting
NWSA’S 40TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE Protest, Justice, and Transnational Organizing 2019 NWSA ANNUAL CONFERENCE: Protest, Justice, and Transnational Organizing NOV 14–17, 2019 SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA NOVEMBER 2018 14-17, SAN FRANCISCO, CA 2020 NWSA Chair and Director Meeting About Friday March 6th The 2020 Chair and Director meeting will be focused on the different responses Chicago, IL to external pressures experienced by departments, programs, and centers. This event is intended to promote field- building by bringing together program and department chairs and women’s center directors for a day-long meeting as an added benefit of institutional membership. Participants will exchange ideas and strategies focused on program and center administration, curriculum development, and pedagogy, among other topics. Participation requirements: • 2020 institutional membership • Chair and Director Meeting registration fee $125 • Registration form DEADLINE The fee includes participation in the event and TO REGISTER: breakfast and lunch the day of the meeting. It does not include travel. NWSA will cover one night’s FEBRUARY 15, 2020 accommodations for those who require it. 2019 NWSA ANNUAL CONFERENCE: Protest, Justice, and Transnational Organizing NOV 14–17, 2019 SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA Table of Contents President’s Welcome ........................................... 4 A Brief (and Incomplete) History of the NWSA Women of Color Caucus ................................... 43 Conference Maps ............................................... 5 NWSA Receptions -
Samizdat Magazines of the Soviet Dissident Women's
SAMIZDAT MAGAZINES OF THE SOVIET DISSIDENT WOMEN’S GROUPS, 1979-1982: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS By Alexandra Talaver Submitted to Central European University Department of Gender Studies In partial fulfillment of the degree of Master of Arts in Gender Studies. Supervisor: Associate Professor Éva Fodor CEU eTD Collection Budapest, Hungary 2017 Abstract The current research aims to re-write, or at least reconsider, the history of feminism in the USSR during the late Brezhnev years. My starting point is the group which is often called ‘the first Soviet feminists,’ or considered to be the first reincarnation of feminist ideas in the Soviet Union since 1920s, namely, the dissident women’s group, which appeared in 1979 with samizdat publication of the almanac Woman and Russia and existed till 1982. My research question is: Was the Woman and Russia group the only feminists in the SU in 1970s, and what are implications of that label in light of the Cold War competition? The dissident women's group started its activity at the time of intense international debates on women’s rights after the International Women’s Year of the United Nations (1975) and during the ratification of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (1979). Thus, it was a time when women's rights became an important battlefield of the Cold War confrontation. Therefore, regarding the group I will not only reconstruct the history of this group, and do a content analysis of their almanacs, but also situate their activity within the broader political context. My key argument is that the exclusive attachment of the label 'feminist' to the dissident women's group both in media and scholarship is determined by the Cold War paradigm and serves to erase the history of activism of communist women or those who acted within the state system. -
Gennaio 2020 Numero Doppio Issue 41-42
Numero 41-42 – Gennaio 2020 Numero doppio Issue 41-42 – January 2020 Double Issue ISSN: 1824-4483 DEP 41-42 Indice Introduzione p. I Anna Bravo, Storie da scoprire, storie da ripensare p. III Parte monografica. Donne disarmanti Catia Confortini, Introduction p. 1 Catia Confortini, Arms and the Women: The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom on Disarmament, 1945-1975 p. 6 Bruna Bianchi, “Eravamo commosse dalla sincerità del Papa”. La missione di Women Strike for Peace a Roma, aprile 1963 p. 23 Silvia Camilotti, Pro o contro la bomba atomica. Riflessioni intorno al saggio di Elsa Morante p. 47 Rin Odawara, Anti-Nuclear Movement and ‘Motherhood’ in Post-War Japan: A Feminist Perspective p. 54 Catherine Eschle, Research Note: Racism, Colonialism and Transnational Solidarity in Feminist Anti-Nuclear Activism p. 64 Benedikte Zitouni, Distruzione planetaria, ecofemministe e politiche di trasformazione nei primi anni ’80 p. 79 Parte miscellanea Diana Barreto, De monasterios a prostíbulos. Las primeras instituciones femeninas en el sistema sexo/género hispano-latino, durante el siglo XVI p. 104 Mayumi Mizutamari, MichiKo Ishimure e i “popoli nomadi” p. 125 Pia Masiero, “The tree is saying things in words before words”: form as theme in Richard Powers’ The Overstory p. 135 Documenti Bettina Brentano von Arnim, Il libro del re, traduzione e cura di Silvia Alfonsi p. 151 Claire Goll, La licenza (1918), traduzione e cura di Camilla Lunardelli p. 179 Gertrud Woker, Effetti nocivi della radioattività (1965), a cura di Bruna Bianchi p. 187 Testimonianze Rebecca Rovoletto, Il lato femminile dei conflitti territoriali. Appunti di viaggio in Abya Yala p. -
Lee Rhiannon: a Lifetime of Political Activism
Lee Rhiannon: A Lifetime of Political Activism Suellen Murray Centre for Applied Social Research RMIT University, Melbourne, VIC. 3001 [email protected] Abstract: For over 40 years, Lee Rhiannon has been active in Australian politics. She was a leader of numerous social movement campaigns before becoming a Greens member of parliament in the New South Wales upper house in 1999 and then winning a seat in the Australian Senate, which she will take up in July 2011. Rhiannon has been a strong advocate for a range of environmental and social justice issues, and continues to support political processes that promote participatory democracy. Keywords: women and leadership, political activism, social movements Introduction From 1999 to 2010, Lee Rhiannon was a Greens member in the Legislative Council of the New South Wales parliament. At the 2010 federal election, she successfully stood for election to the Senate. Rhiannon has been touted as the next Australian Greens leader, successor to long-serving Tasmanian Senator Bob Brown. But her decade and more of parliament has only been the latest installment of a lifetime of political activism. And while some might think that becoming a politician would be the pinnacle of Rhiannon’s career, as she said in her inaugural speech, ‘parliament makes the law, but it is the people who make history’. 1 So, while she has great respect for parliament, she considers that it has just been another aspect of her political work—and this work has included significant contributions to the women’s, peace and environmental social movements. In these various social movements and in her work as a parliamentarian, Rhiannon has displayed leadership of great importance, but she is reluctant to call herself a leader. -
“Transnational Maternalism and the Vietnam War”
The Onyx Review: The Interdisciplinary Research Journal © 2020 Center for Writing and Speaking 2020, Vol.6, No. 1, pp. Agnes Scott College “Transnational Maternalism and the Vietnam War” Amelia Reynolds Agnes Scott College ABSTRACT The Vietnam War (1961-1975) was a period of protest and unrest all over the world, particularly in the U.S. The War was occurring at the same time as second wave feminism, so it was quite common for feminist protests to address the Vietnam War. Maternalism was one type of feminism that was popular during this time. Maternalist feminism emphasizes the importance of the connection between women and children, and relies on traditional gender roles; they argue that because women and children are so interconnected, women should be allowed into the public sphere so that they can make change that is best for children. This stance was very popular among women who protested the war, and there were several organizations based in this belief. This paper will look at three anti-war organizations that rely on maternalist feminism to make their cases: Women’s Strike for Peace (WSP), the Vietnam Women’s Union (VWU), and Women’s Independent Democratic Federation (WIDF). Through focusing on these three organizations, it will be shown how these three organizations used a maternal feminist approach by emphasizing traditional gender roles to capture the attention of the public about the violence and brutalities of the war against women and children. It will be argued that the Vietnam War changed the meanings of concepts such as motherhood and femininity through anti-war activism, and that these concepts distort American’s perception of war. -
The Australian Women's Liberation Movement and the Communist Party of Australia, 1965-1975
TITLE,...PAQE^ SCARLET MOONS: The Australian Women's Liberation Movement and the Communist Party of Australia, 1965-1975. by Margaret Penson, M.A., Dip.Ed., Dip.Lib. A Dissertation submitted to the fulfilments of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the School of History, Philosophy and Politics, Macquarie University. ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS. This thesis has relied on the time and encouraging support of the following people who spoke to me and discussed their Communist Party memories; Laurie Aarons, Jean Bailey, Derek Beechey, Sally Bowen, Janet Copley, Barbara Curthoys, Geoff Curthoys, Eileen Dalwood, Jean Davidson, Joan Goodwin, Ina Jones, Winifred Mitchell, Judy Mundey, Mavis Roberston, Paula Rix, Joyce Stevens and Reg Wilding. I am grateful to Jean Bailey who took much time in introducing me to a number of people in the Newcastle area with whom I could discuss the thesis; to Mavis Robertson and Joyce Stevens who spent time editing the transcripts of their interviews and to Reg Wilding with whom I had a number of pleasant discussions over a beer. I am indebted to Professor Duncan Waterson and Dr. Jim Gillespie for their supervision of my work, especially for their positive support, ideas and editorial assistance, and to Dr. Meredith Burgmann whose enthusiastic support helped me put pen to paper. My thanks to: Danny Blackman for supporting the project of cataloguing the Communist Party of Australia records held at the Mitchell Library, Sydney, and to Jim Andrighetti for undertaking the project and thereby making access to these records possible; Staff at the Mitchell Library for their pleasant and efficient help; Brian Aarons and members of the National Executive of the Communist Party of Australia for giving me permission to use the Party's records; Phillipa Hall and Shirley Woodland for their enthusiastic support and assistance.