Conscious Acts and the Politics of Social Change: Feminist approaches to social movements, community, and power, Volume 1

Front Cover
Robin L. Teske, Mary Ann Tétreault
Univ of South Carolina Press, 2000 - 308 pages

A look at more than a century of feminist activism around the world

Conscious Acts and the Politics of Social Change counters the notion, widely propagated by antifeminist forces, that feminists represent a group of socially deviant outsiders. In fifteen essays that explore feminist projects to advance human freedom, social activists and academic analysts find feminists to be typical members of their society who promote social movements for nonviolent change in law-abiding ways. Foiling the picture of aberrance, they portray feminists as grandmothers demonstrating quietly in city squares, mothers distributing "subversive" literature from their babies' strollers, and pious women taking issue with politicians who use religion to justify repressive legislation. The contributors also contend that feminism has been a strong force for building civil society and fighting oppression in political and social systems throughout the world.

The essays offer a range of reports on feminist theory and activism, some of which celebrate success stories, including the struggle of American women who fight for suffrage, of Czechoslovaks who resist Communist censorship, of Chilean women who want to end the oppressive Pinochet regime by demanding an accounting of their "disappeared" children. Other essays relate failures--the use of an organization intended to provide assistance to Russian families to gain publicity for its American director and to embezzle funds for her local assistants, the clash among women's groups in Iowa that contributed to the defeat of a state equal rights amendment. The remaining essays consider the persistence of socially ambiguous behavior such as lying, violence, cruelty, and discrimination. Collectively the case studies provide opportunities to investigate the characteristics and strategies that have affected positive social change--and those that have not--with an eye toward understanding how persons who want to initiate constructive social change might do so with the resources at their disposal.

 

Contents

Introduction Framing the Issues
1
Prologue
29
Social Movements
35
Some Theoretical Musings about
56
Political Space
72
Composition on a Multiple Plane
91
The Butterfly Effect
107
International Human Rights Law Feminist
124
How Grandmother Won the
188
A Conversation with Betty Durden
209
Parallel Centers of Power
219
New Approaches to Power in Grassroots
230
Power and Powerlessness in the Help Fund
246
Women and the Charta 77 Movement
265
Women Power and Politics
273
Common Ground Affiliate Organizations
285

Prologue145
145
Womens Movements and the Autonomy
170

Common terms and phrases

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