316
316
Aug 6, 2009
08/09
by
Shugar, Dana R., 1961-
texts
eye 316
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Includes bibliographical references (p. 197-210) and index
Topics: Feminist theory, Feminism, Radicalism, Lesbian separatism
Source: removedNEL
KPFK's Barbara Cady and Los Angeles Free Press reporter Helen Koblin interview Jill Johnston, Village Voice columnist and author of Lesbian Nation. Johnston explains her views of lesbianism as the only true radical feminist position. She discusses the purported link between lesbianism and madness, her relationship with her children, and whether the lesbian feminist struggle is equivalent to the oppression of Third World peoples. Likely the same as BC1481.
Topics: American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Cady, Barbara., Johnston, Jill, Lesbian...
Source: http://pacificaradioarchives.org/american-women-making-history-and-culture-1963-1982
Three women who believe that lesbians can find their own identities by relating exclusively with other women discuss this view. The panelists discuss where on the spectrum of "lesbian separation" they currently find themselves and whether men and women can relate to each other in a patriarchal society. The guests are Jan Crawford, convener of the Feminist Community Coalition; Carol Hardin, and Doris Lunden of Lesbian Feminist Liberation. The host and producer is Ronald Gold.
Topics: Gold, Ron., Lunden, Doris., Hardin, Carol., Lesbians -- Personal narratives, Lesbian separatism,...
Source: http://pacificaradioarchives.org/american-women-making-history-and-culture-1963-1982
3
3.0
Nov 26, 2021
11/21
by
Baim, Tracy
texts
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287 pages : 23 cm
Topics: Gray, Vernita, Gray, Vernita -- Interviews, African American women civil rights workers -- Illinois...
8
8.0
Jan 13, 2022
01/22
by
Maria McGrath
texts
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In 1977, Selma Miriam, Betsey Beaven, and Samn Stockwell formed a collective and opened the Bloodroot restaurant and bookstore in Bridgeport, Connecticut. Pat Shea and Noel Furie (then Giordano) joined shortly after. The Bloodroot Collective strove to embody its radical lesbian ethics in every facet of the business from its vegetarian menu to its self-service rule. Like the women’s movement as a whole, the Collective’s feminism, and its enterprise, was conditioned by its members’ white...
Topics: Feminism, 1960s Counterculture, Food History, Lesbian Separatism, Vegetarian Restaurants