Best of
Feminism

1973

Diving Into the Wreck


Adrienne Rich - 1973
    / The words are purposes. / The words are maps. / I came to see the damage that was done / and the treasures that prevail." These provocative poems move with the power of Rich's distinctive voice.

No More Masks: An Anthology of Twentieth-Century American Women Poets


Florence Howe - 1973
    A revised and expanded edition of the classic groundbreaking anthology of 20th-century American women's poetry, representing more than 100 poets from Amy Lowell to Anne Sexton to Rita Dove.

My People Shall Live: Autobiography of a Revolutionary as Told to George Hajjar


Leila Khaled - 1973
    "The most obvious moral of this book is that violence always breeds more violence. The Nazis subjected the Jews to violence. The Jews treated the Palestinians with violence. The Palestinians see violence as the only means of recovering their country and their freedom. At the age of twenty, Leila Khaled wrote, "armed struggle is the way of salvation"....Yet this determined young woman did not call on her comrades to exterminate the Israelis or to drive them into the sea. When victory is won, she says, we will establish a democratic state in Palestine with Jews and native Palestinians on equal terms. The author's descriptions of her hijacking exploits are vividly written and exciting. We do not often have the opportunity to hear an account of such incidents written by the hijacker rather than by the victims.

To Be of Use: Poems


Marge Piercy - 1973
    

Girls Can Be Anything


Norma Klein - 1973
    By using living examples, Marina convinces her kindergarten friend Adam that girls can be doctors, pilots, and presidents, too.

The Lesbian Body


Monique Wittig - 1973
    On a fictional Sapphic island where women live exclusively among themselves, the narrator-protagonist, in a series of invocations to her lover and descriptions of the island's life, celebrates the contours, contents, and satisfactions of the lesbian body.

The Good Fight


Shirley Chisholm - 1973
    

Knowing Woman


Irene Claremont de Castillejo - 1973
    Characteristic of feminine consciousness, she writes, is diffuse awareness, which recognizes the unity of all life and promotes acceptance and relationship. The masculine attitude is one of focused consciousness, the capacity to formulate ideas and to change, invent, and create. Concerned with the experience of women in a culture dominated by masculine values, the author discusses topics such as the animus (the masculine "soul image" in a woman's unconscious); women's roles in relation to work, friends, children, and lovers; and issues such as abortion, aging, and self-determination.

The Militant Suffragettes


Antonia Raeburn - 1973
    It was a revolution - a violent revolution for the rights of equal citizenship, but without bloodshed. The Suffragettes fought for the oppressed, but where themselves exceptional women, and they remained essentially feminine and dignified in the face of opposition, ridicule and humiliation. The book is filled with stories of feats of endurance, ruses, escapes and disguises - amusing, touching and sometimes horrifying.The suffragettes tried peaceable methods of demonstration and were eventually driven to extremes of behaviour totally alien to their upbringing and previous life. When the fight was on, class barriers ceased to exist; led by the Pankhursts, mill girls and ladies of high rank worked equally together. They gained strength - a moral strength - by courage and faith in their cause.

The Female Woman


Arianna Huffington - 1973
    

Sexual Conduct: The Social Sources of Human Sexuality (Social Problems & Social Issues)


John H. Gagnon - 1973
    It went on to profoundly shape the ideas of several generations of scholars and has become the foundation text of what is now known as the social constructionist approach to sexuality. The present edition, revised, updated, and containing new introductory and concluding materials, introduces a classic text to a new generation of students and professionals.Traditional views of human sexuality posit models of man and woman in which biological arrangements are translated into sociocultural imperatives. This is best summarized in the phrase anatomy is destiny. Consequently, the almost exclusive concern has been with the power of biology and nature in sexual conduct as opposed to understanding the significance and impact of social life. In Sexual Conduct, Gagnon and Simon lucidly argue that sexual activities, of all kinds, may be understood as the outcome of a complex psychosocial process of development. Using the social script theory, the authors trace the ways in which sexuality is learned and fitted into particular moments in the lifecycle and in different modes of behavior.Sexual Conduct is a major attempt to consider sexuality within a non-biological, social psychological framework. It is a valuable addition to the study of human sexuality, and will be of interest to students of sociology, psychology, psychiatry, social work, and medicine.