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Famous Feminists: W-Z
Patricia J. Williams (502)
A thoughtful commentator on race and racism in America. An interdisciplinary
legal scholar and public intellectual, she approaches issues of
law and social justice in novel ways. Her writings weave together
elements of popular culture, memoir, political theory, social activism,
and traditional analysis of cases, statutes, and the Constitution.
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Monique Wittig (299)
French novelist, poet, and social theorist. As a founding leader
in the French feminist movement, Wittig's literary and theoretical
works were recognized as essential contributions to feminist thought
in Europe and the U.S. and to the emerging movement for lesbian
and gay rights. Wittig's work has had a fundamental impact upon
feminist theory and lesbian and gay theory worldwide. Her novels,
including Les Guerilleres (1969), The Lesbian Body
(1973), Lesbian Peoples: Materials for a Dictionary (co-authored
with Sande Zeig, 1975), and Virgile, non (1984, translated
as Across the Acheron in 1987) combine a sensitivity to the
nuances of language and style with a powerful illustration of her
philosophy of lesbian materialism, a theoretical position she set
forth in a series of essays collected in The Straight Mind
(1992), a term she coined.
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Mary Wollstonecraft (56)
The Anglo-Irish feminist, intellectual and writer, Mary Wollstonecraft,
was born in London. She was an early proponent of educational equality
between men and women, expressing this radical opinion in Thoughts
on the Education of Daughters (1786). Her most important book,
A Vindication of the Rights of Women (1792), was the first
great feminist document. She also wrote several novels.
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Mitsuye Yamada (317)
A poet, educator, and founder of Multicultural Women Writers of
Orange County. She was in Fukuoka, Japan. Yamada's own ordeal during
World War II and observations of her mother's way of life bring
anti-racist and feminist attitudes to her works. Her works include
Camp Notes and Other Poems(1976) 2nd ed.(1992) and Desert
Run: Poems and Stories (1988).
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