Dominique Meeùs
Dernière modification le
Bibliographie :
table des matières,
index des notions —
Retour à la page personnelle
Auteurs : A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z,
Auteur-œuvres : A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z,
This is the first published collection of specifically British women’s liberation writings. In the three years since the first groups were formed in 1969 the Movement has grown very rapidly, indicating the depth and extent of feeling among women about their position as an oppressed class. Many different tendencies and positions have developed within the Movement. This book does not follow any single line, but attempts to show how the Movement has developed and what progress has been made in particular directions.
Je reprends la table des matières en y ajoutant les détails qui introduisent chaque article :
At the first national women’s conference at Ruskin College, Oxford, in February-March 1970, the following four demands were formulated.
This was written in June 1969. Sheila Rowbotham is a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
This paper was written by members of the London Peckham Rye group, Women’s Liberation Workshop, and presented at the Ruskin College Women’s Conference, Oxford, March 1970. It was also printed in ‘Shrew’, February-March 1970.
Written by a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop, and given as a paper at ‘A radical critique of sociology’, a one-day conference at the London School of Economics in December 1971.
Written by a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop, and presented as a talk to students at Hornsey College of Art in Summer 1971, as part of a series of seminars on Women’s Studies.
This interview appeared in ‘Shrew’ September 1971, in the issue produced collectively by the Notting Hill group of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
This piece appeared in the revolutionary paper ‘Black Dwarf’, in an issue in Summer 1970 which had a section on women’s liberation.
Written by a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
‘Women’s Newspaper’ issue no. 2
The ‘Women’s Newspaper’ came out for three issues in 1971. It was produced by a women’s
collective, and distributed through women’s groups.
Written by a member of Radical Women in Medicine.
This piece appeared in the September 1970 issue of ‘Shrew’.
An interview with Sandy Grew, 20, who had just completed her second borstal training recall. The interview appeared in ‘7 Days’ on 19 January 1972.
Written by members of the Black Women’s Action Committee, Black Unity and Freedom Party, in August 1971.
Sheila Rowbotham is a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
This piece appeared in the March 1971 issue of ‘Shrew’, written, edited and produced by the Tufnell Park group of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
Written as an impressionistic account of the process of the small group by a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
This piece appeared in the 15 March 1972 issue of ‘7 Days’. The author is a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
This piece appeared in ‘Shrew’, May 1971, an issue about the family, written, edited and produced by the Belsize Lane group of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
This paper was read at the 1970 Women’s Conference in Oxford. The writer was at the time a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop. The paper is also available as a pamphlet from Agitprop: see end of book for address.
Written by a member of Socialist Women’s group, West London, and presented at a Socialist Woman conference, 1971. For a full analysis of the arrangements mothers make for their children, see ‘Working mothers and their children’, by Simon Yudkin and Anthea Holme.
This piece appeared in the March 1971 issue of ‘Shrew’, written, edited and produced by the Tufnell Park group of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
This article was written for the ‘New Edinburgh Review’ issue on women, published in Summer 1972. Sue Sharpe is a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
Written for the book by the Northern Women’s Groups Education study group.
This is the first part of a paper written for the Claimants’ Union conference on unemployment held in London in 1971.
Felicity Trodd is a member of Socialist Woman, London.
Leonora Lloyd is a member of Socialist Woman, London. This paper was first presented to the Women’s Weekend at Ruskin College, Oxford, in February-March 1970.
Hermione Harris is a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop. This paper was originally written to provide factual information on the location of black women in the labour force to a working convention on ‘Racism in the political economy of Britain’ held in London in 1971.
This piece is based on a paper on women and delinquency presented at the Women’s Weekend at Ruskin College, Oxford in February-March 1970.
Monica Sjoo is a member of Bristol Women’s Liberation.
Pat Whiting is a member of Women’s Liberation, and this piece is based on research for a book she is writing on female sexuality.
Anna Davin is a member of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.
This account of the London night-cleaners’’ campaign was written by the members of the London Women’s Liberation Night-Cleaners’ Collective, with help from some of the night cleaners. The campaign started with leafletting at the end of October 1970. International Socialist Women leafletted until Christmas, then Women’s Liberation Workshop groups started alongside them and were joined by Socialist Woman. Cleaners have also been organising in Birmingham, Norwich, Lancaster and Manchester. This has been especially successful in Manchester. In Lancaster cleaners went on strike for free transport, which they got, and were supported by students.
This report and analysis was written by members of Cambridge Women’s Liberation.
This was written by the women who took part in the demonstrations against the Miss World contest in 1970 and were arrested. Their trial took place in summer 1971. The article first appeared as a pamphlet, ‘Why Miss World?’, available from the London Women’s Liberation Workshop.