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Feminism and The Future of Women

Lecture 1   What Is Feminism?

Lecture 2   Before Feminism: Explaining Gender and Power

Lecture 3   The Idea of Equality

Lecture 4   Feminism and Race in U.S. History

Lecture 5   Global Feminisms

Lecture 6   Domestic Labor

Lecture 7   Women, Wage Earning, and the Wage Gap

Lecture 8   Feminist Responses to Women’s Labor

Lecture 9   Body Politics

Lecture 10   Reproduction and Sexuality

Lecture 11   Violence

Lecture 12   Spirituality and Creativity

Lecture 13   Political Power

Lecture 14   Feminist History and the Future of Women

Since the time of the abolitionists, no movement has so politicized social life in the United States as feminism. Responsible for wide-ranging legislation, such as women’s right to vote and the right to an abortion, feminists have fought their way to the center of the country’s political dialogue and made themselves a major presence there. But the road to such influence has not been easy.

From the battle over the Equal Rights Amendment to the continuing debates about abortion, feminists have often found themselves in the middle of the country’s most hotly contested disputes. They have won many allies, but also many enemies. Yet even under the most intense political pressure, feminism has continued to grow. It has evolved from a women’s movement concerned with the rights of mostly white, middle- and upper-class women to an ideology that embraces women from communities of color to, most recently, a movement of international solidarity that pleads the cause of oppressed women around the world, from those brutalized by the Taliban in Afghanistan to teenagers sold into slavery in the East Asian sex trade.

Feminists have long called attention to historical injustice and unfair labor practices. Now feminism has reached a position where it must decide not only how to redress the discriminations of the past but how best to shape the future of women.




Professor

Professor Estelle B. Freedman
(Stanford University)
For the past twenty-five years, Estelle B. Freedman, a founder of the Program in Feminist Studies at Stanford University, has written about the history of women in the United States. Freedman is the author of two award-winning studies: Their Sisters’ Keepers: Women’s Prison Reform in America, 18...




LINKS
  • Course Forum
  • Final ExamCourse Final Exam
  • Social Science Courses

  • Related Links
  • noturningback.stanford.edu/quo... - Other definitions of feminism
  • www.nwhp.org - National Women’s History Project
  • frank.mtsu.edu/%7ekmiddlet/his... - For library research sources, see American Women’s History: A Research Guide
  • www.nwhp.org/tlp/main/main.htm... - Home of the National Women’s History Project
  • www.mith2.umd.edu/WomensStudie... - Home of the Women’s Studies Database maintained by the University of Maryland
  • www.bartleby.com/144/ - Mary Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights of Women
  • etext.library.adelaide.edu/au/... - The Subjection of Women by John Stuart Mill
  • www.pacifict.com/ron/Sojourner... - Keeping the Thing Going While Things Are Stirring by Sojourner Truth (1867)
  • More Links ...
    - Course password Required.



    09-Feb-2010
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