Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Our Bodies, Ourselves ; Author: Boston Women's Health Book Collective (Our Bodies Ourselves) Language: English: Published: 1968, by Simon & Schuster. Between 1971 and 2011, the print edition of "Our Bodies, Ourselves" was revised and updated eight times. Publication place: United States: ISBN: 0-671-21434-9
By 1973, 350,000 copies of the retitled Our Bodies, Ourselves had been sold without any formal advertising. [41] As a result of their success, the women formed the non-profit Boston Women's Health Book Collective (which now goes by the name Our Bodies Ourselves) and published the first 276-page Our Bodies, Ourselves in 1973.
Esther Rachel Rome (née Seldman; September 8, 1945 – June 24, 1995) was an American women's health activist and writer. She was part of group of 12 women who co-founded the Boston Women's Health Book Collective (now called Our Bodies, Ourselves), and wrote a widely published book called Women and Their Bodies that was updated and expanded over time.
In “Bodies Bodies Bodies,” a group of rich kids — five old friends, along with a couple of not-so-significant others — gather for a hurricane party at the pastoral suburban mansion of one ...
Norma Meras Swenson (born 1932) is an activist, a medical sociologist and a leader in the developing woman's health movement.She co-founded the Boston Women's Health Book Collective (BWHBC), and co-authored with the Collective, Our Bodies, Ourselves (OBOS), and served as president of the OBOS nonprofit organization for several years.
Our Bodies, Ourselves, a book about women's health and sexuality; Our Bodies Our Doctors, a 2019 American documentary film This page was last edited on 8 ...
Nancy Miriam Hawley is an activist and feminist who contributed to the founding of Our Bodies, Ourselves.She also serves as a co-author of Ourselves and Our Children, [1] and a publisher of You and Your Partner, Inc: Entrepreneurial Couples Succeeding in Business, Life and Love, in which she teamed up with her husband to publish. [2]
The counterculture wanted to explore the body and mind, and free the personal self from the moral and legal sexual confines of traditional American values. [16] The sexual revolution sprung from a conviction that the erotic should be celebrated as a normal part of life, dodging religion, family, industrialized moral codes, and the state.