Feminism: Difference between revisions
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The [[WisCon]] version (at http://www.wiscon.info/faq.php) is also applicable: | The [[WisCon]] version (at http://www.wiscon.info/faq.php) is also applicable: | ||
We define "feminist" broadly to include race and class issues, gay/bisexual/lesbian/transgender issues, and anything else that touches on strong women (authors, artists, readers, characters) in science fiction, fantasy, and horror. | We define "feminist" broadly to include race and class issues, gay/bisexual/lesbian/transgender issues, and | ||
anything else that touches on strong women (authors, artists, readers, characters) | |||
in science fiction, fantasy, and horror. | |||
==Bibliography== | ==Bibliography== | ||
Revision as of 07:27, 6 June 2006
Feminism is a big tent, but most (maybe all?) feminists would agree that "it is the radical notion that women are people".
For this site, let's start with anything relating to
- gender relations
- sex roles
- sexual & reproductive biology
- women's history
- feminist perspectives & analyses
"Feminism" might better be described as "feminisms", and it would include a number of different trends, identities, politics, and historical tendencies:
- First Wave Feminism
- Second Wave Feminism
- Third Wave Feminism
- Difference Feminism
- Radical Feminism
The WisCon version (at http://www.wiscon.info/faq.php) is also applicable:
We define "feminist" broadly to include race and class issues, gay/bisexual/lesbian/transgender issues, and anything else that touches on strong women (authors, artists, readers, characters) in science fiction, fantasy, and horror.
Bibliography
Foundational Works of Feminist Theory
- A Vindication of the Rights of Woman by Mary Wollstonecraft (1792)
- Seneca Falls Declaration (1848)
- The Feminine Mystique by Betty Friedan (1963)
Introductions & Overviews & Feminism 101 Collections
- Feminisms, ed. Warhol & Price Herndel