Books on the topic 'Womens liberation'

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1

Women and socialism: Essays on women's liberation. Chicago, IL: Haymarket Books, 2005.

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2

Petty, Celia. Women's liberation & socialism. London: Bookmarks, 1987.

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3

Heywood, Jeanne. The cost of liberation. [South Africa]: National Council of Women of South Africa Conference, 1996.

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4

The women's liberation movement. Detroit: Greenhaven Press, 2012.

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5

Parker, Sue. Financial liberation for women. [Greenside, Johannesburg: Prescon Pub. Corp., 1987.

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6

Women: Models of liberation. Kansas City, MO: Sheed & Ward, 1988.

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7

Ahmad, Naseem. Liberation of Muslim women. Delhi: Kalpaz, 2001.

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8

Giardina, Carol. Freedom for women: Forging the women's liberation movement, 1953-1970. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2010.

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9

Freedom for women: Forging the women's liberation movement, 1953-1970. Gainesville: University Press of Florida, 2010.

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10

Ugwulebo, Emma Osonna Oguala. Obstacles to women liberation in Africa. Owerri: Chukwuemeka Printers & Publishers, 1998.

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11

Gloria Steinem: Women's liberation leader. Edina, Minn: ABDO Pub. Co., 2011.

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12

Elmessiri, Abdelwahab M. Feminism versus women's liberation movements. Annandale, VA: United Association for Studies and Research (UASR), 2004.

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13

Women liberation: The Sikh vision. New Delhi: Wisdom Collection, 2012.

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14

Pandey, Rekha. Women, from subjection to liberation. Delhi, India: Mittal Publications, 1989.

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15

Ann, Adele. Women fighters of Liberation Tigers. London: LTTE International Secretariat, 1993.

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16

Slow miracles: Urban women fighting for liberation. San Diego, CA: LuraMedia, Inc., 1995.

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17

Briskin, Linda. Feminist pedagogy: Teaching and learning liberation. Ottawa: CRIAW = ICREF, 1990.

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18

Briskin, Linda. Feminist pedagogy: Teaching and learning liberation. Ottawa: Canadian Research Institute for the Advancement of Women, 1990.

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19

Briskin, Linda. Feminist pedagogy: Teaching and learning liberation. Ottawa: CRIAW/ICREF, 1994.

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20

(Mauritius), Muvman Liberasyon Fam. The Women's Liberation Movement in Mauritius. Forest-Side, Mauritius: The Movement, 1988.

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21

Jennings, Terry Catasús. The women's liberation movement, 1960-1990. Philadelphia, PA: Mason Crest Publishers, 2012.

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22

A new vision of women's liberation. Cologne, West Germany: Rebel Pub. House, 1987.

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23

Connie, Willis, and Williams Sheila, eds. A woman's liberation: A choice of futures by and about women. New York: Warner Books, 2001.

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24

Wachege, P. N. African women liberation: A man's perspective. Kiambu, Kenya: P.N. Wachege, 1992.

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25

Scovill, Nelia Beth. The liberation of women: Religious sources. Washington, D.C: Religious Consultation on Population, Reproductive Health and Ethics, 1995.

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26

Liberation: A novel. New York: Little, Brown, 2005.

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27

People's war and women's liberation in Nepal. Kathmandu: Janadhwani Publication, 2007.

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28

Scapegoat: The Jews, Israel, and women's liberation. London: Virago, 2000.

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29

Women And Socialism Updated Edition Essays On Womens Liberation. Haymarket Books, 2012.

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30

Feeling Womens Liberation Next Wave New Directions in Womens Studies. Duke University Press, 2013.

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31

Womens Liberation Socialist Revolution Documents Of The Fourth International. IMG Publications, 2010.

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32

Witches Goddesses And Angry Spirits The Politics Of Spiritual Liberation In African Diaspora Womens Fiction. Ohio State University Press, 2013.

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33

Wittekind, Erika. Gloria Steinem : Women's Liberation Leader: Women's Liberation Leader. ABDO Publishing Company, 2011.

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34

Hesford, Victoria. Feeling Women's Liberation. Duke University Press, 2013.

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35

Hesford, Victoria. Feeling Women's Liberation. Duke University Press, 2013.

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36

Hesford, Victoria. Feeling Women's Liberation. Duke University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9780822397519.

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37

Engdahl, Sylvia. Women's Liberation Movement. Greenhaven Publishing LLC, 2012.

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38

Joseph-Gabriel, Annette K. Reimagining Liberation. University of Illinois Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252042935.001.0001.

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In the 20th century, black women in the French empire played crucial leadership roles in anticolonial movements. This book harnesses untapped archival documents to highlight the work of Suzanne Césaire, Paulette Nardal, Eugénie Éboué-Tell, Jane Vialle, Andrée Blouin, Aoua Kéita and Eslanda Robeson, women who remain relatively understudied in scholarship that continues to privilege male politicians and writers. Examining the literary production and political activism of African, Antillean, Guyanese and African American women, this book argues that black women writers and thinkers articulated multi-layered forms of citizenship that emphasized plural cultural and racial identities in direct opposition to colonialism. Their decolonial citizenship expanded the possibilities of belonging beyond the borders of the nation state and even the French empire to imagine transnational Pan-African and Pan-Caribbean identities informed by black feminist intellectual frameworks and practices.
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39

McLarney, Ellen Anne. The Redemption of Women's Liberation. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691158488.003.0003.

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The concept of women's liberation has become an integral part of a transnational Islamic discourse, deployed in contexts as diverse as debates over the freedom to wear the headscarf in France, in the writings of exiled Muslim Brothers in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia, and in the rhetoric of the Ennahda Party in postrevolutionary Tunis. The idea of women's liberation, identified as growing out of colonial feminism and an imperialist secular liberalism, has now become part of a popular Islamic discourse reiterated by activists and scholars alike. This chapter charts the origins of a discourse of women's liberation in Islam during the nineteenth-century awakening known as the naḍda and its revival for the late twentieth-century ṣaṭwa. The concept of women's liberation was vilified in the naḍda, with Qasim Amin's Liberation of Woman being called a “sermon of the devil.” The later ṣaṭwa, however, would appropriate the concept and language of women's liberation, making it a most potent ideological weapon.
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40

Orr, Judith. Marxism and Women's Liberation. Bookmarks/U. S. A., 2015.

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41

Orr, Judith. Marxism and Women's Liberation. Bookmarks/U. S. A., 2015.

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42

Reed, Evelyn. Problems of Women's Liberation. Pathfinder Pr, 1993.

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43

Marxism and women's liberation. London: League for a Revolutionary Communist International, 1989.

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44

Malik, S. M. A. Agamy and Women's Liberation. 4th ed. Roseneath Scientific Pubns., 2000.

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45

Marxism and Women's Liberation. Bookmarks, 2015.

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46

Women's Liberation: Jesus Style. Ruach Communications, 1998.

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47

Upton, Aisha A., and Joyce M. Bell. Women’s Activism in the Modern Movement for Black Liberation. Edited by Holly J. McCammon, Verta Taylor, Jo Reger, and Rachel L. Einwohner. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780190204204.013.31.

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This chapter examines women’s activism in the modern movement for Black liberation. It examines women’s roles across three phases of mobilization. Starting with an exploration of women’s participation in the direct action phase of the U.S. civil rights movement (1954–1966), the chapter discusses the key roles that women played in the fight for legal equality for African Americans. Next it examines women’s central role in the Black Power movement of 1966–1974. The authors argue that Black women found new roles in new struggles during this period. The chapter ends with a look at the rise of radical Black feminism between 1974 and 1980, examining the codification of intersectional politics and discussing the continuation of issues of race, privilege, and diversity in contemporary feminism.
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48

Browne, Sarah, Penny Summerfield, Cordelia Beattie, Pamela Sharpe, and Lynn Abrams. Women's Liberation Movement in Scotland. Manchester University Press, 2016.

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49

Browne, Sarah. Women's Liberation Movement in Scotland. Manchester University Press, 2017.

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50

Browne, Sarah, Penny Summerfield, Cordelia Beattie, Pamela Sharpe, and Lynn Abrams. Women's Liberation Movement in Scotland. Manchester University Press, 2016.

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