Common Women, Uncommon Practices: The Queer Feminisms of GreenhamThis is a book about how individual, social, political and cultural change is created through the actions of ordinary women. It is about a unique community of women where conventions were overturned and lives transformed, and it is about a social movement in which tens of thousands of women confronted the police and military to resist the momentum towards nuclear war. The women's peace camp at Greenham Common represented a new direction for feminism in Britain, a queer post-modern feminism which broke with tradition and destabilized certainties. This book weaves together stories of life at Greeham with analysis of its politics. The voices of Greenham women describe living outdoors, in all weathers, in a diverse and ever-changing community of strong-minded women - the pleasures and the problems. Tales of actions and arrest, court and prison are told, and the changes wrought by these experiences are explored. Women speak of the transformations in their lives which took place at Greenham, of sex and sexuality, relationships, friendship and love. |
From inside the book
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Page 86
... Newbury , Berkshire . What are the questions the media will ask us At the Peace Camp , Newbury , Berkshire ? I'll tell you now of some that I know , And the rest , you'll read them later . ' Why did you make this sacrifice ? ' ' Can I ...
... Newbury , Berkshire . What are the questions the media will ask us At the Peace Camp , Newbury , Berkshire ? I'll tell you now of some that I know , And the rest , you'll read them later . ' Why did you make this sacrifice ? ' ' Can I ...
Page 229
... Newbury District Council requesting the removal of the camp within fourteen days and threatening court proceedings to secure eviction if the camp did not disband.2 By then , the camp had been in existence for four months . This might ...
... Newbury District Council requesting the removal of the camp within fourteen days and threatening court proceedings to secure eviction if the camp did not disband.2 By then , the camp had been in existence for four months . This might ...
Page 254
... Newbury Magistrates ' Court , on the schedules of the police officers and soldiers who had to set aside days to attend court , and on the organization of the prosecution service is hard to overstate . The administration of ' justice ...
... Newbury Magistrates ' Court , on the schedules of the police officers and soldiers who had to set aside days to attend court , and on the organization of the prosecution service is hard to overstate . The administration of ' justice ...
Contents
Action Stories | 186 |
Queerying Authority | 227 |
Queering Lives | 277 |
Copyright | |
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Common Women, Uncommon Practices: The Queer Feminisms of Greenham Sasha Roseneil No preview available - 2000 |
Common terms and phrases
actually anarchic Ann Armstrong arrested bailiffs Barbara Rawson base became benders blockades Blue Gate Britain Campaign Camper Carmel Cadden Carol Harwood Carola Addington court Cruise missiles cutting the fence decision ethics evictions experience feel felt feminism going Green Gate Greenham Common Greenham network Greenham women group of women happened Helen John Helen Mary Jones heterosexual ideas important involved with Greenham Jinny List Katrina Allen Kim Smith knew laughter Leah Thalmann lesbian living at Greenham Liz Galst London military never Newbury night non-violence nuclear weapons number of women Orange Gate organized particularly Peace Camp peace movement Penni Bestic Penny Gulliver police political postmodern prison queer feminist radical relationships remember Rowan Gwedhen Sarah Benham SASHA sexual soldiers sort Stayer stuff talking things thought took violence Violet Gate visitors walk woman women at Greenham women-only women's liberation movement Yellow Gate