<a href="http://dl.lib.brown.edu/pdfs/1124979008226934.pdf">Six Black Women: Why Did They Die</a>
reprint in Radical America of pamphlet Six Black Women: Why Did They Die
Combahee River Collective
Radical America
1979
Cassandra Langer's Romaine Brooks site
ALL OR NOTHING: Romaine Brooks
deals with the artist as a hero of her own making. When she died in 1970 Romaine Brooks had been neglected for decades. It was only with the 1972 exhibition organized by the then National Collection of Fine Arts (Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D.C.) that a wide public once more saw her works.
Brooks provided art historical lineage as well as inspiration and model for 1970s lesbian feminist artists.
Cassandra Langer
Conference on Women's Culture in American Society
academic conference
poster of program
Archives of American Art, Woman's Building Papers
Woman's Building
March 21-22 1981
jpg
English
Conference Program Scholar & The Feminist V
feminist art movement
feminist conferences
artivism
academic feminism
Program from the Scholar & The Feminist V Creating Feminist Works
Barnard Center for Research on Women
The scholar and the feminsit website
Barnard Center for Research on Women
<p>Panelists/presenters: Jacqueline Anderson Mattfeld, Eve Merriam, Nancy K. Miller, Harmony Hammond, Elizabeth Minnich, Ann Sutherland Harris, Catti James, Catherine R. Stimpson, Honor Moore, Suzanne Kessler, Wendy McKenna, Sandra M. Whisler, Erika Duncan, Karen Malpede, Carol McCauley, Gloria Orenstein- Diane Lacey, Naomi Weisstein, Alix Kates Shulman, Elizabeth Weatherford, Margo Jefferson, Wilma Diskin, Paula Doress, Electa Arenal, May Stevens,</p>
<p> </p>
<p> Coordinator Elizabeth Minnich Planning Committee Louise Adler, Hester Eisenstein, Irene Finel-Honigman, Pamela Fishman, Linda Marks, Mary Parlee, Susan R. Sacks, Maria von Salisch, Sandra Whisler Conference Coordinators, Women's Center Jane S. Gould, Ellen McManus</p>
PDF
English
April 15 1978
Document Archive from Scholar and the Feminist XXX Past Controversies, Present Challenges
Future Feminisms
academic feminism
feminist conferences
women's studies
Selections from thirty years of The Scholar and The Feminist Conferences at Barnard College
various
S & F Online
Barnard Center for Research on Women
1974-2005
<ol><li>Mimi Abramovitz</li>
<li>Martha Ackelsberg</li>
<li>Marjorie Agosín</li>
<li>Susan McGee Bailey</li>
<li>Sheila Dauer and Barbara Schulman</li>
<li>Jane Flax </li>
<li>Judith Friedlander</li>
<li> Jane Gallop</li>
<li> Carol Gilligan</li>
<li> Sherry Gorelick</li>
<li> Mae G. Henderson</li>
<li>Ruth Hubbard</li>
</ol><p>Tanya Melich<br />Juliet Mitchell</p>
<p>Ruth Nemzoff<br />Stacy Wolf</p>
FSW broadside
feminist art, art education
broadside designed by Sheila de Bretteville to announce and recruit for the Feminist Studio Workshop, an alternative program of feminist art education. Text written by Judy Chicago, Sheila de Bretteville, and Arlene Raven.
Judy Chicago, Sheila de Bretteville, and Arlene Raven.
PDF created by Sue Maberry and the staff of the Millards Sheets Library at Otis College of Art.
c. late 1972
29 x 25 inches, paper
English
text, image,
I Am Your Sister Collected and Unpublished Writings of Audre Lorde Transgressing Boundaries Studies in Black Politics & Black Communities
edited by RUDOLPH P. BYRDJOHNNETTA BETSCH COLEBEVERLY GUY-SHEFTALL
Sisterly (Inter)Actions: Audre Lorde and the Development of Afro-German Women's Communities
http://www.genderforum.org/issues/black-womens-writing-revisited/sisterly-interactions/
Audre Lorde first came to Germany in 1984 as a guest professor at the Free University of Berlin, where she taught a poetry workshop, a course on Black American women poets as well as a seminar entitled "The Poet as Outsider." Dagmar Schultz, who was teaching at the Free University at that time, had met the self-proclaimed "Black, Lesbian, Mother, Warrior, Poet"[1] at the 1980 World Conference on Women in Copenhagen, Denmark and had immediately invited Lorde to teach in Berlin (2000: 7). It took four years until Lorde finally arrived in Germany
Katharina Gerund
Gender Forum: An Internet Journal for Gender Studies
Issue #22, 2008
Untitled Graphic
Image of woman giving birth
Hanako
Image from page 13 of Voice Of the Women's Liberation Movement, no 6
February 1969
image/jpg, 2304 × 3072, 1.7MB
image