| Famous
Feminists: A - B
Carol J. Adams (Course Reader)
Author of the groundbreaking The Sexual Politics of Meat: A
Feminist-Vegetarian Critical Theory and several other books.
Carol's work is widely cited, anthologized and used as a text in
college courses in the United States, Canada, and Great Britain.
Her work is featured in an award-winning documentary, A Cow at My
Table. A rock group, Consolidated, devoted one track of their CD
Friendly Fascism to The Sexual Politics of Meat.
Sites: 1 |
Linda Martin Alcoff (403)
Works primarily in continental philosophy, epistemology, feminist
theory, and philosophy of race. Her books include Feminist Epistemologies
(Routledge, 1993), Real Knowing: New Versions of the Coherence
Theory of Knowledge (Cornell, 1996), Epistemology: The Big
Questions (Basil Blackwell, 1998), and Thinking From the
Underside of History (Rowman and Littlefield, 2000).
Sites: 1
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Paula Gunn Allen (372)
Laguna, Sioux and Lebanese, is a poet, novelist and critic. She
has taught at Fort Lewis College, Durango, CO, the College of San
Mateo, San Diego State University, San Francisco State University,
where she was the director of the Native American Studies Program,
the University of New Mexico, Albuquerque, and the University of
California at Berkeley, where she was Professor of Native American
/ Ethnic Studies. She is now Professor of English at the University
of California at Los Angeles
Sites: 1
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Gloria Anzaldua (398)
Helped make visible the literature of women of color in the USA.
She is a chicana lesbian-feminist, poet, writer, and cultural theorist.
Ms. Anzaldúa was born September 26, 1942 in Jesus Maria of the Valley,
Texas in a family of Mexican immigrants. She graduated from college
as the only one from her neighborhood and started her work as teacher
of children from migrant families. Her book Borderlands/La Frontera:
The New Mestiza (Spinsters/Aunt Lute, 1987), which combines
Spanish and English poetry, memoir, and historical analysis, was
chosen as one of the 38 Best Books of 1987 by the Literary Journal.
In addition to winning an NEA Fiction Award, Ms. Anzaldua was awared
the 1991 Lesbian Rights Award and the Sappho Award of Distinction
in 1992.
Sites: 1
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Simone de Beauvoir (145)
Born and educated in Paris, Simone de Beauvoir was among the first
women permitted to complete a program of study at the École Normale
Supérieure. Through her lifelong friendship with Sartre,
she contributed significantly to the development and expression
of existentialist
philosophy. In Le Deuxième Sexe (The
Second Sex), de Beauvoir traced the development of male
oppression through historical, literary, and mythical sources, attributing
its contemporary effects on women to a systematic objectification
of the male as a positive norm. This consequently identifies the
female as Other, which commonly leads to a loss of social and personal
identity, the variety of alienation unique to the experience of
women. Her works of fiction focus on women who take responsibility
for themselves by making life-altering decisions, and the many volumes
of her own autobiography exhibit the application of similar principles
in reflection on her own experiences.
Sites: 1
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Beijing Declaration of Indigenous Women
(506)
The declaration reaffirmed the 1995 Beijing Declaration of Indigenous
Women, the right to self-determination, and the cultural connection
to land and territory. Recognizing the effects of colonialism and
neo-liberal economic policies, the declaration included fourteen
broad recommendations relating to issues such as the UN Draft Declaration
on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples (which governments refused to
address, despite its inclusion in the Beijing Platform), poverty,
health, and the World Conference Against Racism.
Sites: 1
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Rita Mae Brown
Perhaps America's most successful modern lesbian writer, Brown
was born in Hanover, Pennsylvania and adopted and raised by her
mother's cousin. Brown lived with that family for some time in Ft.
Lauderdale, Florida and later attended the University of Florida
in Gainesville. After being expelled for civil rights activism,
she hitchhiked to New York City. There she earned a B.A. degree
from New York University and a certificate in cinematography from
the School of Visual Arts. At NYU Brown co-founded the Student Homophile
League. She was a member of the radical feminist group the Redstockings
and the National Organization for Women. She left NOW in 1970, angered
at their refusal to address lesbian issues and focused on recruiting
women to join Radicalesbians. In 1973, while living in Washington,
D.C. as part of the Furies separatist collective, she earned a Ph.D.
from the Institute for Policy and published her breakthrough novel
Rubyfruit Jungle.
Sites: 1
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Judith Butler (75 and 465)
Professor of Comparative Literature and Rhetoric at the University
of California, Berkeley, and is well known as a theorist of power,
gender, sexuality and identity. Indeed, she is described in alt.culture
as "one of the superstars of '90s academia, with a devoted
following of grad students nationwide". (A fanzine, Judy!,
was published in 1993)
Sites: 1 |
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