Authors: Margaret Walters
Tags: #Social Science, #Feminism & Feminist Theory, #Anthropology, #Cultural, #History, #Social History, #Political Science, #Human Rights
Naomi Wolf,
Fire with Fire
(London: Chatto and Windus, 1993).
Germaine Greer,
The Whole Woman
(London: Doubleday, 1999).
minism
Fe
148
Christine Bolt,
Feminist Ferment: ‘The Woman Question’ in the USA
and England, 1870–1940
(London: UCL Press, 1995) John Charvet,
Feminism
(London: Dent, 1982) Susan Faludi,
Backlash: The Undeclared War Against Women
(London: Chatto and Windus, 1992)
Estelle B. Freedman,
No Turning Back: The History of Feminism and
the Future of Women
(London: Profile Books, 2002) Sarah Gamble (ed.),
The Routledge Companion to Feminism and
Postfeminism
(London: Routledge, 2001) Germaine Greer,
The Female Eunuch
(London: MacGibbon and Kee, 1970)
Germaine Greer,
The Whole Woman
(London: Transworld Publishers, 2000)
Sandra Kemp and Judith Squires (eds.),
Feminisms
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1997)
Helena Kennedy,
Eve Was Framed: Women and British Justice
(London: Vintage, 2005)
Anne Koedt, Ellen Levine, and Anita Rapone (eds.),
Radical
Feminism
(New York: Quadrangle/The New York Times Book Co., 1973)
Reina Lewis and Sara Mills (eds.),
Feminist Postcolonial Theory
(Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2003)
Janet Price and Margrit Shildrick (eds.),
Feminist Theory and the Body:
A Reader
(Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 1999) 149
Sheila Rowbotham,
The Past is Before Us: Feminism in Action since the
1960s
(Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1990) Sheila Rowbotham,
A Century of Women: The History of Women in
Britain and the United States
(London: Viking, 1997) Marsha Rowe (ed.),
Spare Rib Reader
(Harmondsworth: Penguin Books, 1982)
Jennifer Mather Saul,
Feminism: Issues and Arguments
(Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003)
Lynne Segal,
Is the Future Female? Troubled Thoughts on
Contemporary Feminism
(London: Virago Press, 1987) Lynne Segal,
Why Feminism?
(Cambridge: Polity Press, 1999) Bonnie G. Smith,
Global Feminisms since 1945
(London: Routledge, 2000)
minism
Fe
150
Bernard of Clairvaux
6
Besant, Annie
66–7, 91
Bible
9–10, 11, 18
A
Billington, Teresa
77, 78, 82–3,
abortion
94, 99, 108, 110, 120,
black Americans
46, 102,
academic feminism
139–41
Blackwell, Elizabeth
60–1,
Adam and Eve
9, 10, 18
Adams, John
30
Blood, Fanny
31
adultery
48, 131
Bodichon, Eugene
58
Africa
125
Bolshevik Revolution
134
Algren, Nelson
101
Bourigue, Antonia
13
Amberley, Lady
74
Bradlaugh, Charles
91
Amin, Ghassem,
Freedom of
Bradstreet, Anne
18
Women
129
Brazil
118, 121, 122
Anabaptists
15
Bright, Jacob
75
Ang, Ien
117
Brontë, Charlotte
49, 55
Anger, Jane
9
Brontë sisters
47
anorexia
110
Brown, Rita Mae
107
Anthony, Susan B.
77
Browne, Stella
94
anti-slavery movement
46, 58
Brownmiller, Susan,
Against
arson
80
Our Will
114–15
Ascham, Roger
17
Bryant and May
66–7, 91
Astell, Mary
26–9, 42
Bunyan, John
11
Astor, Lady
87
Burney, Fanny
39, 47
The
Athenaeum
1
Butler, Josephine
64–6
Austen, Jane
39, 47
Australia
73
C
Cambridge University
62, 63,
B
Barrett Browning, Elizabeth
57
cancer
110
beauty contests
4, 108, 109,
Carlyle, Thomas
70
Carmichael, Stokely
105
Beauvoir, Simone de
98–101
Cavendish, Elizabeth
see
Becker, Lydia
72, 75
Newcastle, Duchess of
Bedford College, London
62,
charity schools
28
child custody
48, 58, 88, 130,
Behn, Aphra
24–5
151
childcare
2, 20, 108
domestic violence
120, 121, 122
children
36, 44, 121
Drummond, Flora
77
guardianship of
88, 89
Dworkin, Andrea
115–16
civil service
88, 90
Civil War
13, 18
E
class struggle
106, 118, 133
education
17–18, 31
Cobbe, Frances Power
54, 61,
eighteenth century
31
eighteenth century writers
colonialism
118–19
‘consciousness-raising’
110,
Josephine Butler on
64
Langham Place group
59, 61,
Contagious Diseases Acts
(1864, 1866, 1869)
64,
Marion Reid on
42
Mary Astell on
27–9
contraception
91–4, 108, 110,
middle class
31, 54
in Muslim countries
130
convents
6, 28
Reformation and
9, 28
cosmetic surgery
110
in ‘Third World’
120
Cowley, Hannah
35
university
62–3, 90, 130
Crimean War
50–2
minism
Virginia Woolf on
94–5
Fe
Cromwell, Oliver
14
Egypt
127, 129
Eliot, George
55, 57, 59
D
Elizabeth I, Queen
17
The
Daily Chronicle
1
Ellison, Grace,
An English
Daily Mail
75
Woman in a Turkish
Davies, Emily
61–3, 71, 74
Harem
123, 125, 127
Davis, Lady Eleanor
13–14
employment
2
Davison, Emily Wilding
82
exploitation
66–7
Denmark
73
health care
50–2, 57, 58,
Denny, Lord
20
Diaz, President Porfirio
119
Langham Place group on
56,
dieting
110
Din, Naxira Zain al
127
middle class
56
Disraeli, Benjamin
43
professional
88
Dissenters
10, 31
war-time
86
divorce
47, 88, 120, 130, 131
encuentros
122–3
Divorce Reform Act (1857)
49
engagements
58
doctors
57, 58, 60–1, 63–4, 129
England
106, 107, 114, 129
152
English Women’s Journal
Garrett, Elizabeth
61, 63–4, 72,
equality
15, 19, 86, 108, 138
Gaskell, Mrs Elizabeth
55, 57
Friedan on
102
Gates, Reginald
91, 93
Kollontai on
135
Genet, Jean
105
Mill on
46, 47
genital mutilation
123, 124,
Muslim countries
129–30
NUSEC
87, 88
Germany
1, 7
Thompson on
44
Girton College, Cambridge
Evans, Katherine and Chevers,
Sarah
11
Gissing, George
55
Evans, Mary Ann (George
Gladstone, William
75
Eliot)
55, 57, 59
Godwin, William
36, 38, 40
Gothic novels
39, 40
F
Gouges, Olympe de
34
Gournay, Marie de
19
Faludi, Susan
137
Greer, Germaine:
Fell, Margaret
11–12
The Female Eunuch
106
The Female Eunuch
(Greer)
The Whole Woman
138
In
dex
Griffin, Susan,
Pornography
The Feminine Mystique
and Silence
114
(Friedan)
102
Grimke, Sarah and Angelina
femininity
33–5, 41, 49, 52, 56,
groups
108–14, 122–3, 132, 136
Ferrier, Susan
47
Ladies National Association
fiction,
see
novels
Fifth Monarchists
13, 14
‘Ladies of Langham Place’
Firestone, Shulamith
106, 112
First World War
85, 86
WSPU (Women’s Social and
Fisk, Robert
140–1
Political Union)
75–7
France
129
guardianship
88, 89
Freedman, Estelle
3
French Revolution
38, 44
Freud, Sigmund
105
H
Friedan, Betty
102–3, 107
Hamun, Zegreb,
A Turkish
Woman’s European
G
Impressions
125, 127
Galindo de Topete, Hermila
Hardie, Keir
78
harems
123, 125, 127
153
health issues
110, 121
Khomeini, Ayatollah
130
‘hembrismo’
119
Killigrew, Thomas
25
Hildegard of Bingen
6–7
Knight, Anne
68
hooks, bell
102, 105
Kollontai, Alexandra
134, 135
Houses of Parliament
15–16,
L
housework
2, 9, 16, 42, 59, 87,
Ladies National Association
human rights
97
Langham Place group
49,
hunger strikers
78, 83, 84
Hunt, Henry ‘Orator’
69
Lanyer, Aemilia
9–10
Lanzmann, Claude
101
I
Latin America
118, 119, 134
Imlay, Gilbert
38
Lawal, Amina
125, 126
immigrants
134–6
Lawrence, D. H.
105
industrial action
108, 132
Leigh Smith, Barbara
57–9, 61,
Infants Custody Act (1838)
48
international conferences
97,
Lennox, Duke of
15
lesbian feminism
107, 114
minism
International Women’s Day
Levellers
15–16
Fe
local government
87–8
Internet
139
London Society for Women’s
Interregnum
13, 14
Suffrage
72
Iran
129, 130–1
Lorde, Audre
117
Islam fundamentalists
125
lunacy
13–14
Lytton, Lady Constance
83
J
M
Jameson, Anna
58
Joel (prophet)
12–13
Macaulay, Catherine
30–1
Johnson, Dr
30
Macaulay, Rose
89
Johnson, Joseph
32
‘machismo’
119, 122
Johnston, Jill
107
McKinnon, Catherine
115–16
Julian of Norwich
7–8
magazines
88–9, 91, 105, 119
‘mail-order’ brides
134
Mailer, Norman
105
K
Makin, Bathsua
18
Kempe, Margery
8
male suffrage
69, 70
Kenney, Annie
77, 83, 85
Malthusian League
91
154
Mama, Amina
125
Mitchell, Juliet
106, 112
Manley, Mary
23–4
Mitchell, Juliet and Oakley,
marital rape
122
Ann
3, 137
Markham, Violet
71
MLF (Mouvement de
marriage 28, 30, 36, 39, 55, 88,
Libération des Femmes)
92, 106, 130,
see also
property rights
modesty
11, 16, 20–1, 30
marriage law
45, 53, 58–9
Mohanty, Chandra Talpade
118