Feminist Literacies, 1968-75In the late 1960s and early 1970s, ordinary women affiliated with the women's movement were responsible for a veritable explosion of periodicals, poetry, and manifestos, as well as performances designed to support "do-it-yourself" education and consciousness-raising. Kathryn Thoms Flannery discusses this outpouring and the group education, brainstorming, and creative activism it fostered as the manifestation of a feminist literacy quite separate from women's studies programs at universities or the large-scale political workings of second-wave feminism. Seeking to break down traditional barriers such as the dichotomies of writer/reader or student/teacher, these new works also forged polemical alternatives to the forms of argumentation traditionally used to silence women, creating a space for fresh voices. Feminist Literacies explores these truly radical feminist literary practices and pedagogies that flourished during a brief era of volatility and hope. |
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... argues that “subaltern people often produce histories that are ephemeral—in oral form, undocumented, unpreserved, difficult to locate, or hard for an 'outsider' to interpret” (19). The irony here seems to be that women, subaltern or ...
... argues that feminists should abandon print and rely exclusively on face-to-face contact. Indeed, both worry that the other side of a class blindness that takes literacy for granted is an anti-intellectualism that sees literacy as ...
... argue for the importance of a literacy education that would work against the elitism and the anti-intellectualism that they believe converged to weaken the movement. Such an education would require, as hooks sees it, breaking down the ...
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Contents
1 | |
Feminist Periodicals | 23 |
Reclaiming Feminish Polemic | 60 |
3 That Train Full of Poetry | 97 |
Feminist Performance Work | 132 |
5 The DoItYourself Classroom | 168 |
1972 New York State Womens Political Caucus List of Conveners | 203 |
Notes | 209 |
Works Cited | 231 |
Index | 249 |