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Radical America
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An account of the resource
As Jonathan Weiner pointed out in his history of radical historians in the United States, more than any other journal, Radical America, expressed "a Marxism that valued working-class culture and consciousness and strove to integrate class analysis with the cultural con- cerns growing out of black nationalism, feminism, and youth culture."
My analysis of the larger context in which antipathy towards women's culture developed rests on the articles published by the key participants, often while they were still in graduate school, in Radical America.
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Michelle Moravec
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Elizabeth Gurley Flynn, The Early Years
Description
An account of the resource
<p>1975 Baxandall on Elizabet Gurley Flynn, execerpted from an introduction to a volume of EGF’s writings that the American Institute for Marxist Studies refused to print,. Flynn as depicted by Baxandall is the perfect offspring of the marriage of feminism and socialist. She first gained acclaim, as a youngster who advocated for the enfranchisement of women in her school’s oratory contest, and rose to public acclaim as a teen defender of the rights of workers. Baxandall describes her as a “class conscious feminist child prodigy.” Like feminists of the 1970s, Flynn drew her radicalism from her lived experiences, “her family, her poverty, and her encounters with anarchists and socialists” so that by high school she was plowing through Engels and Bebel, still in the 1970s the foundational texts for socialist women, as well as Wollstonecraft. While still a minor, Flynn joined the new union, the I.W.W. and was elected a delegate to the convention, and made speeches on behalf of the union, for which she received her first wages. Despite her commitment to the I.W.W., Flynn took on their bifurcated notion of womanhood, described by Baxandall as “women like their mothers, and bad women who fleeced them on payday.” Flynn struggled to change this attitude, even as she hewed to the party line that class divided precluded alliances along the lines of sex “the ‘wueen of the parlor’ has no interest in common with the ‘maid of the kitchen’.”</p>
<p>At 17, Flynn quit school and went to work as an organizer for the I.W.W. , where she quickly met and married a miner. Despite her marriage, Flynn carried on her independent political life, and within a few years, the marriage ended. Flynn returned to her parents’ home with her one surviving child in tow, and resumed her labor work as soon as the child weaned. Flynn paid particular attention to the plight of female workers and workingmen’s wives, providing a gendered analysis of their class-based oppression. This, combined with her activism, turned Flynn into something of a role model. </p>
http://dl.lib.brown.edu/pdfs/1125403651398134.pdf
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Rosalyn Fraad Baxandall
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Radical America
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January-February 1975
Radical America
-
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7d787c787e3dd08a8a2f02bebcffc54e
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Radical America
Description
An account of the resource
As Jonathan Weiner pointed out in his history of radical historians in the United States, more than any other journal, Radical America, expressed "a Marxism that valued working-class culture and consciousness and strove to integrate class analysis with the cultural con- cerns growing out of black nationalism, feminism, and youth culture."
My analysis of the larger context in which antipathy towards women's culture developed rests on the articles published by the key participants, often while they were still in graduate school, in Radical America.
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Michelle Moravec
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"Women and The Socialist Parties"
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Mari Jo Buhle, noted prof of women's history, is one of the pivotal figures in my history of the Politics of Women's Culture. Buhle, along with her husband Paul, while grad stus at the Univ. of Wisconsin, became involved in SDS and published Radical America.
In the first issue of Radical America to consider "the woman question" Buhle contributed her early research on women in socialism. "Women and The Socialist Parties" turns the predecessors of Mother Jones and Elizabeth Gurley Flynn into foremothers of “women’s liberation activists of today.”
Her study describes “two principle categories of socialist women” “women who formed "autonomous, socialist-oriented groups” which the SP eventually recognized, and “women within the party who were reacting to the insurgency of the spontaneous women’s groups.” Buhle’s tale of the tragically divisive “question of primary goals” seems almost a foreshadowing of the women’s culture wars so closely do these divisions mirror those that occurred in the WLM.
Despite the derision of their brothers-in-arms of “pink tea party propaganda” women within the SP remained committed to the “traditional woman’s role of providing a social auxiliary.” Gradually a splinter group formed a Women’s National Socialist Union” (shades of the sixties women’s unions) largely influential in a handful of states.As suffrage reached down to the working classes, the SP was forced to addressed the vexed woman question or risk seeing the workers coopted into reformism.
According to Buhle, "The Socialist Woman became the voice piece of women in the party who worked autonomously. The “other women” who organized separately “made it clear to male Socialists that women engaged in their separate branches were not only housewives in search for an education in socialism but in many cases articulate spokesmen of woman’s rights who seemed to draw most heavily from a volatile feminism, … Holding that, even under Socialism, women could not be free until they had developed the power of freedom within themselves, the organizers stressed the significance of separate women’s clubs”hmmm shades of the radical feminist/politico split. Again, the parallels astonish me. Replace socialism with NL and we’ve the split into the autonomous WLM, a parallel clearly not lost to Buhle who repeatedly uses the word autonomous.
The Socialist Party, much like the New Left, continued to disregard the pleas of the women, until in 1908, in appropriately for the parallels I wish to draw, in Chicago, where in the 1970s the strongest socialist-feminist group emerged. “The first joint meeting of the woman’s branch and the socialist woman’s league, … was held … for the purpose of effecting a national organization of Socialist women” separate from the party itself. Despite the creation of a National Woman’s Committee within the Socialist Party at a convention later that year “for many socialist women this historical event went by, not unnoticed, but without practical effect. The tensions between the women’s clubs and the male-dominated locals continued to reinforce their basic assumption that under then-current conditions women’s interests were not and could not be identified with those of men”
Remove the dates, and the above serves quite well as a justification for separatism, in the sense of women working with women only, in the WLM. In this tale of competing entities, it is oddly the party funded National Women’s Committee that had more impact, as it could provide the educational resources to local groups, while the umbrella organization of those local groups, the Federation of Socialist Women’s Clubs, lacking the party resources, existed in name only. Ultimately, thanks to an influx of female members supporting suffrage, but 1910 the NWC had become a powerful player in the SP. The women, setting aside their “former attacks upon the men’s failure to live up to the old sex-equality platform … congratulated their male comrades for casting aside traditional prejudices against ‘feminine politics’
Still all was not perfect. Women still split in the party between those who “believe[d] that their tactics should flow from fundamental socialist theory” and women who sought “political expression in American society” aka “reformist-suffrage.” Unable to recruit working class women via the suffrage propaganda that had proved so successful in recruiting middle class women, Socialist women drew on Bebel and Engels to formulate a “materialist conception of the woman’s struggle” that “provided women with a view of history that denied a biologically determined role for their sex,” which reminds me of the earliest radical feminists, such as Firestone did, in their narrative of women’s oppression. These self-identified predecessors made a “special appeal to women as women [which] brought the socialists into the main line of the burgeoning feminist movement” like Mitchell and Bentson did in the late 1960s. However as suffrage became a mainstream movement, and the men within the socialist party pushed for more traditional socialist activism, the influence of women waned, and reformism won the day.
One doesn't have to dig too deep into the historical parallels to see the cautionary historical tale offered here. If women don't get with the program in the women's liberation movement, then those N.O.W. ladies will prevail.
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Mari Jo Buhle
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Radical America
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February 1970
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Radical America
Radical America
-
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The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
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Radical America
Description
An account of the resource
As Jonathan Weiner pointed out in his history of radical historians in the United States, more than any other journal, Radical America, expressed "a Marxism that valued working-class culture and consciousness and strove to integrate class analysis with the cultural con- cerns growing out of black nationalism, feminism, and youth culture."
My analysis of the larger context in which antipathy towards women's culture developed rests on the articles published by the key participants, often while they were still in graduate school, in Radical America.
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Michelle Moravec
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"Where are We Going?"
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Marlene Dixon, recently ousted professor of sociology at the Univ. of Chicago argued that “unless the radical women get themselves together … a mass movement dominated by an ideology of “let us in’ (and not ‘set us free’) will develop.”
Dixon's piece consists of a long sweeping history of the WLM beginning with the women’s liberation conference over Thanksgiving Weekend 1968, which she compares to Seneca Falls in historical importance. While she lauds WITCH ‘with its wild and inspired poetic imagery” and “invoked litany of oppression and rebellion” it is clear Dixon would have preferred the conference to have ended in a “structural framework for a movement.” Dixon however sides with the “women who have bolted from, or never belonged to established leftist organizations” (the autonomous wlm), a group Dixon labels “the ‘wildcat’ women,” who faced leftists women obsessed with“the invisible audience… male heavies” and proved more interested in developing "a politics with sufficient analytical merit to force the men to recognize the legitimacy of the women’s movement.”
For Dixon, the split was not ideological, politico versus feminist, so much as the audience to which factions addressed themselves “other women or movement men.” The communicative styles of these two factions wildcats v radical women point to some of the key issues at stake in the women’s culture war. “The recklessness and originality of the wildcats … the very woman-ness (irrationality, expressiveness, emotionality, anti-intellectualism” Dixon argues “terrified Movement women” because they had long defended themselves against such characterizations by the movement men with whom they worked. The wildcat women “took women (as mystical, rebellious, expressive and mysterious) … while the leftist women were using the leader-intellectual model (the role from which all rewards flow in the movement as theirs)” Consequently the “wildcats” viewed the radical women as “unliberated” while the leftist women decried the wildcats as “hopelessly a-political and counter revolutionary” Again as with the Gail Paradise Kelly article, also this issue, I’m struck by the parallels with the women’s culture wars. Substitute women’s culture for wildcat women and we’ve basically described that split.
Dixon then segues into a confrontation that occurred at a Black Panther Conference “United Front Against Fascism” (UFAF) in Oakland (July 1969). Women, fearing that time would run short for the “women’s panel” interrupted venerated lefty dude Herbert effing Aptheker. The Panthers, perhaps mistaking the women’s protest as FBI plants or attempts to infiltrated the conference by other lefty groups, got a little jumpy, but in the end the women’s panel occurred. All might have been fine, according to Dixon, had not some Left women appeared the next day to defend the Panthers in the form of decrying the anti revolutionary stance of the women involved the prior day contretemps.
As Dixon describes it “their idea of defense was to attack the other women as counter-revolutionary lackeys of capitalism, objectively racist,” leading to some discussion among WL activists of denouncing the entire conference as male chauvinist. While this never occurred, the events intensified “an increasing atmosphere of suspicion and distrust between those [women] who were still members of established organizations rather than independent women’s liberation groups.” For Dixon, as long as the two factions in women’s liberation continue to address different audiences, the male left and other women, the fighting will continue.
Dixon cites women’s participation in the student activism at University of Chicago in Jan 1969 (although oddly enough not noting that the "two week sit-in [occurred] over the firing of radical feminist professor Marlene Dixon”) as evidence of women’s lib ability to get shit done. Dixon laments that “the University of Chicago sit in is [just] a contemporary example of the fact that male supremacy weakens the entire Movement. History is repeating itself. From the Abolitionists to the Labor movement, women have been exploited” and viewed as secondary, mobilized “to the barricades when needed [and then] sent back to the kitchen.” Shades of the discussion in Women: A Journal of Liberation about the relationship of suffrage and abolition, published just a few months later in the Spring of 1970.
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Marlene Dixon
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Radical America
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February 1970
Radical America
-
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Radical America
Description
An account of the resource
As Jonathan Weiner pointed out in his history of radical historians in the United States, more than any other journal, Radical America, expressed "a Marxism that valued working-class culture and consciousness and strove to integrate class analysis with the cultural con- cerns growing out of black nationalism, feminism, and youth culture."
My analysis of the larger context in which antipathy towards women's culture developed rests on the articles published by the key participants, often while they were still in graduate school, in Radical America.
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Michelle Moravec
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Apologia
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Edith Hoshino Altbach
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Radical America
Radical America
-
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Radical America
Description
An account of the resource
As Jonathan Weiner pointed out in his history of radical historians in the United States, more than any other journal, Radical America, expressed "a Marxism that valued working-class culture and consciousness and strove to integrate class analysis with the cultural con- cerns growing out of black nationalism, feminism, and youth culture."
My analysis of the larger context in which antipathy towards women's culture developed rests on the articles published by the key participants, often while they were still in graduate school, in Radical America.
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Michelle Moravec
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buhle image
Radical America
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Radical America
Description
An account of the resource
As Jonathan Weiner pointed out in his history of radical historians in the United States, more than any other journal, Radical America, expressed "a Marxism that valued working-class culture and consciousness and strove to integrate class analysis with the cultural con- cerns growing out of black nationalism, feminism, and youth culture."
My analysis of the larger context in which antipathy towards women's culture developed rests on the articles published by the key participants, often while they were still in graduate school, in Radical America.
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Michelle Moravec
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art from radical america
Radical America
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Title
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Radical America
Description
An account of the resource
As Jonathan Weiner pointed out in his history of radical historians in the United States, more than any other journal, Radical America, expressed "a Marxism that valued working-class culture and consciousness and strove to integrate class analysis with the cultural con- cerns growing out of black nationalism, feminism, and youth culture."
My analysis of the larger context in which antipathy towards women's culture developed rests on the articles published by the key participants, often while they were still in graduate school, in Radical America.
Contributor
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Michelle Moravec
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cover women's lib radical america
Radical America
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Title
A name given to the resource
Radical America
Description
An account of the resource
As Jonathan Weiner pointed out in his history of radical historians in the United States, more than any other journal, Radical America, expressed "a Marxism that valued working-class culture and consciousness and strove to integrate class analysis with the cultural con- cerns growing out of black nationalism, feminism, and youth culture."
My analysis of the larger context in which antipathy towards women's culture developed rests on the articles published by the key participants, often while they were still in graduate school, in Radical America.
Contributor
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Michelle Moravec
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Title
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kelly article header
Radical America
-
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Feminist Art Movement
Description
An account of the resource
documentation from the feminist art movement, a key source for the development of the concept of women's culture
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The Cunt Coloring Book
Description
An account of the resource
The Cunt Coloring Book by artist Tee A. Corinne translates her detailed drawings of vulvas and labia into graphic, colorable, black and white images. In she 1973 began attending consciousness-raising style workshops with other women and drawing anyone who would pose for her. Corinne believed that “reclaiming labial imagery was a route to claiming personal power for women.”
The Women’s Health Movement, concurrent with the Women’s Liberation movement, worked to change the power dynamic between women and their health care providers, among other political goals including the right to a safe and legal abortion.
http://www.letsremake.info/library_2.html#cunt
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Tee Corinne
Source
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<a href="http://www.letsremake.info/">Let's Remake</a>
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self-published, Re-print by Last Gasp
Date
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1975, rpt 1988
Contributor
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Michelle Moravec
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paperback. staple-bound, 48 pages, ISBN-13: 978-086719-371-8
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Dublin Core
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Title
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Women's Culture Resources
Description
An account of the resource
links to online resources for women's culture in the women's liberation movement
Contributor
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Michelle Moravec
Hyperlink
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Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Title
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I LIke to Think Of Harriet Tubman
Description
An account of the resource
<a href="http://www.angelfire.com/ca/iloveDave/mysg.html">poem</a>
Creator
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Susan Griffin
Source
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No More Masks! An Anthology of Poems by Women, Florence Howe and Ellen Bass, eds
Publisher
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Anchor Books
Date
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1973
Contributor
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Michelle Moravec