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From Suffrage to Women's Liberation: Feminism in Twentieth Century America, Joreen (1995) [535] "From the Back Alleys to the Supreme Court and Beyond", Dorothy Fadiman (1995) Listen Up: Voices from the Next Feminist Generation, edited by Barbara Findlen (1995) Massacre of the Dreamers: Essays on Xicanisma, Ana Castillo (1995)
[clarification needed] Its lyrics focused on the power of women individually and in women solidarity. Later, it became lesbian music. [citation needed] As an offshoot of the feminist movement, the genre was referred to as a musical expression of the second-wave feminist movement [3] and included the female labor, civil rights, and peace ...
The Creation of Feminist Consciousness: From the Middle Ages to 1870, Gerda Lerner (1994) "The Unremembered: Searching for Women at the Holocaust Memorial Museum", Andrea Dworkin (1994) [417] "Why Women Need Freedom From Religion", Annie Laurie Gaylor (1994) From Suffrage to Women's Liberation: Feminism in Twentieth Century America, Joreen ...
One of her best known works is Feminine Endings (1991). "Feminine ending" is a musical term once commonly used to denote a weak phrase ending or cadence.The work covers musical constructions of gender and sexuality, gendered aspects of traditional music theory, gendered sexuality in musical narrative, music as a gendered discourse, and discursive strategies of women musicians.
Ellen Jane Willis (December 14, 1941 – November 9, 2006) was an American left-wing political essayist, journalist, activist, feminist, and pop music critic. A 2014 collection of her essays, The Essential Ellen Willis, received the National Book Critics Circle Award for Criticism .
The academic discipline of women's writing is a discrete area of literary studies which is based on the notion that the experience of women, historically, has been shaped by their sex, and so women writers by definition are a group worthy of separate study: "Their texts emerge from and intervene in conditions usually very different from those which produced most writing by men."
Arabic music is an amalgam of the music of the Arab people in the Arabian Peninsula and the music of all the varied peoples that make up the Arab world. In Egypt during the medieval era , male professional musicians during this period were called alateeyeh (plural), or alatee (singular), which means 'a player upon an instrument'.
While in college in the late '80s, Hanna signed up for a writers' workshop led by her hero, the postmodern novelist Kathy Acker. “You should start a band.” In her feminist punk music, Kathleen ...