Feminist rage: Difference between revisions

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'''Feminist rage''' is the natural and appropriate response to patriarchy.
'''Feminist rage''' is the natural and appropriate response to patriarchy.
Feminist rage is a political expression of female anger.  Female anger is suppressed in a patriarchal and authoritarian society.
==Related reading==
* Deborah Cox, Sally Stabb, & Karen Bruckner, ''Women's Anger: Clinical and Developmental Perspectives'' (1999)
* L. Brown, ''Raising Their Voices: The Politics of Girls' Anger'' (1999)
* L. Brown, "Educating the Resistance: Encouraging Girls' Strong Feelings and Critical Voices," (paper presented at 20th Annual Conference of the Association for Moral Education, Calgary/Banff, Canada, 1994)
* Lois P. Frankel, ''Women, Anger & Depression: Strategies for Self Empowerment'' (1991)
* ''Deirdre Lashgari, editor, ''Violence, Silence, and Anger: Women's Writing as Transgression'' (anthology of essays and excerpts, mostly literary, on women's anger and oppression)


[[Category:Feminism]]
[[Category:Feminism]]

Revision as of 12:56, 12 March 2007

Feminist rage is the natural and appropriate response to patriarchy.

Feminist rage is a political expression of female anger. Female anger is suppressed in a patriarchal and authoritarian society.

Related reading

  • Deborah Cox, Sally Stabb, & Karen Bruckner, Women's Anger: Clinical and Developmental Perspectives (1999)
  • L. Brown, Raising Their Voices: The Politics of Girls' Anger (1999)
  • L. Brown, "Educating the Resistance: Encouraging Girls' Strong Feelings and Critical Voices," (paper presented at 20th Annual Conference of the Association for Moral Education, Calgary/Banff, Canada, 1994)
  • Lois P. Frankel, Women, Anger & Depression: Strategies for Self Empowerment (1991)
  • Deirdre Lashgari, editor, Violence, Silence, and Anger: Women's Writing as Transgression (anthology of essays and excerpts, mostly literary, on women's anger and oppression)