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Feminism and socialism in the United States, 1820-1920Buhle, Mari Jo, January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Wisconsin, 1974. / Vita. eContent provider-neutral record in process. Description based on print version record. Bibliography: leaves 390-407.
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The relationship between feminism and socialism in the life and work of Flora Tristan (1803-1844)Cross, Maire Fedelma January 1988 (has links)
Flora Tristan was one of the earliest activists for feminism and socialism and campaigned under the July Monarchy in France. This thesis aims to highlight the relationship between feminism and socialism through the medium of Flora Tristan's life and work. It is based on a chronological study of her writings to illustrate how her egalitarian feminism developed from her personal circumstances and flourished into literature. It focuses mainly on the evolution of her ideas as she rejected both egalitarian and messianic feminism in favour of socialist militancy among the French working class. Her /- effort to insert feminism, as a high priority, into the nascent socialist movement, is closely scrutinised. In the light of more recent developments in France, the conclusion suggests that her life's work was a microcosm of the relationship between feminism and socialism as it was to develop after her death in 1844.
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Contrasting debates and perspectives from second and third wave feminists in Britain : class, work and activismGerman, Lindsey January 2015 (has links)
The dissertation rests firstly on the author's previously published work (German, 1989; German, 2007; German, 2013) which attempted to analyse the position of women in British society in terms of their relationship to class, work and oppression; and secondly on original research in the form of interviews with a number of Second Wave and Third Wave feminists, which aimed to elicit their responses to a variety of questions in relation to class, women's role at work, and feminist activism. The aim is to contrast the expectations and influences of the different generations of feminists in order to understand what has motivated them and what issues continued to be important for them. The research investigates differences between the two groups of women, considering the extent to which this reflects the different economic and social circumstances in which they were shaped politically. It argues that there is a strong ideological commitment to women's equality across the different age groups, itself based on the inability of successive generations to achieve full equality, but that there are considerable differences of approach to activism and campaigning priorities, as well as to some theoretical questions. It considers the extent to which the Third Wave reflects a fragmentation from Second Wave approaches. It argues that the continued centrality of class in understanding women's oppression and other forms of oppression is related to the discrepancy between the expectations of oppressed groups for equality and capitalism's structural inability to deliver such equality.
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Kvinnokamp : synen på underordning och motstånd i den nya kvinnorörelsen /Isaksson, Emma, January 2007 (has links)
Diss. Stockholm : Stockholms universitet, 2007. / S. 375-393: bibliografi.
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