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Still Mad

Page 43

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  The Dinner Party, 204, 228–31

  Womanhouse exhibition, 8, 164

  Chicana activists, 131

  chick-lit, 287–88

  child abuse, 238

  childbirth, death in, 319

  childcare, 319

  childlessness, 37, 103

  Chisholm, Shirley, 8, 9, 128, 206, 346, 347

  Chodorow, Nancy, 241

  Choi, Susan, Trust Exercise, 336–37

  Chopin, Kate, The Awakening, 11

  Christian Right, 267

  Chu, Andrea Long, 313–14

  CIA, 211, 294

  Civil Rights Act of 1964, 136, 297

  civil rights movement, 48, 54, 60, 61–62, 76, 92–98, 102, 120, 154–55, 176

  Cixous, Hélène, 248

  class hierarchy, 264

  Clayton, Beth, 216

  Clayton, Frances, 215, 216, 218

  Clayton, Jonathan, 216, 220

  Cleaver, Eldridge, Soul on Ice, 129

  Cleaver, Kathleen, 130

  Cliff, Michelle, 218, 254–55

  climate change, 297, 320, 326–29

  Clinton, Bill, 13, 14, 16–17, 293–94

  administration of, 288

  affair of, 288–89

  Clinton, Hillary Rodham, 23–24, 29, 288, 289, 341

  accepts Democratic nomination in 2016, 346, 350

  marriage of, 288

  presidential election of 2016 and, 1–2, 4, 6–7

  schooling of, 12–19

  What Happened, 18

  Close, Glenn, 286

  CNN, 345

  Code Pink: Women for Peace, 295–96

  Cohn, Roy, 166, 269

  Cold War, 174

  Colette, 157, 158, 303–4

  Collingwood, Charles, 74

  Collins, Gail, 127

  Coltrane, John, 53

  Combahee River Collective, 137, 216

  Comfort, Alex, 97

  comic books, 298–304

  Commentary, 112, 179

  Congress of Racial Equality (CORE), 101

  Conrad, Alfred, 87, 176, 177–81, 251, 253, 255

  consciousness-raising, 22, 124, 127, 137, 141, 336

  conservatives, 243–44, 266–70. See also backlash

  ContraPoints, 333

  Conway, Kellyanne, 340

  Cook, Blanche, 220

  Cortés, Hernán, 247

  Cosby, Bill, Fatherhood, 286

  Cosmopolitan, 109, 127

  Cottom, Tressie McMillan, 319

  Coulter, Ann, 319

  counterculture, 103, 113–14

  COVID-19, 5, 326, 345

  Cox, Laverne, 312

  credit, 8, 46

  Crenshaw, Kimberlé Williams, 221, 259

  Crumb, R., 298

  Crunk Feminist Collective, 333

  Cruse, Howard, Gay Comix 1, 300

  Cullors, Patrisse, 320–21

  culture wars, 237, 267–69

  cyberattacks, 320

  cyber-feminism, 270

  cyborgs, 270, 283, 284

  D’Alesandro, Nancy Patricia, 341. See also Pelosi, Nancy

  Dallas, Dick, “I Wish I Knew How It Would Feel to Be Free,” 100

  Daly, Mary, 217

  The Church and the Second Sex, 131

  date rape, 285

  dating websites, sexual harassment and, 309–10

  daughterhood, 204–31

  Daughters, Inc., 158–59

  Daughters of Bilitis, 142

  Davis, Angela, 92–93, 221

  Davis, Miles, 53

  Davis, Sasha, 155–56

  D.C. Liberation, 127

  Dean, Michelle, 177–78

  deconstruction, 248, 270

  Defense of Marriage Act, 288

  democracy, 311

  Democratic National Convention, 8, 207, 289

  Democratic Republic of the Congo, war and torture victims in, 309

  Derrida, Jacques, 248, 249, 270

  Desclos, Anne, 147

  destiny, anatomy and, 41–47, 231

  Deutsch, Helene, 43–44, 47, 57, 68, 106

  The Psychology of Women, 43–44

  De Veaux, Alexis, 217–18

  Dickinson, Emily, 10, 89, 158, 184, 228

  Didion, Joan, 66–67, 103, 110, 114–18, 158, 285

  “John Wayne: A Love Song,” 115

  “Slouching Towards Bethlehem,” 115–18

  “The Women’s Movement,” 158

  difference feminism, 241–42

  Dillard, Annie, 328

  Dinnerstein, Dorothy, 241

  di Prima, Diane, 29, 45, 49–51, 62, 63, 66, 67, 92, 128

  immigration and, 49, 63–64

  marriage and, 50

  Memoirs of a Beatnik, 49–50

  Recollections of My Life as a Woman, 50

  divorce

  in fiction of the seventies, 164

  Hansberry and, 61

  Morrison and, 154

  Plath and, 75

  Sheldon and, 188

  Dodge, Harry, 315–16

  domesticity, 40, 57, 60–61, 68, 79–80, 88, 91, 136, 163, 176, 195, 342

  Pelosi and, 342

  Plath and, 79

  Rich and, 88–91

  domestic violence, 94, 153, 238, 262, 263–64, 308, 309

  Donegan, Moira, 336

  “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell,” 288

  “double consciousness,” 322–24

  Doubleday, 139

  Dowd, Maureen, 289

  drag, 274

  drug overdose deaths, 320

  Du Bois, W. E. B., 55, 322

  Duncan, Robert, 120, 122–23

  “Santa Cruz Propositions,” 123

  DuPlessis, Rachel Blau, 138

  Durkheim, Émile, Suicide, 167

  Dworkin, Andrea, 213, 238–44, 262, 325

  death of, 318

  Intercourse, 240–41

  Last Days at Hot Slit, 244

  lesbianism and, 239

  marriage and, 239

  Pornography: Men Possessing Women, 240

  dystopias, 176, 181, 187–88, 195–97, 203, 267, 326–29. See also speculative fiction and poetry

  ecofeminism, 270, 328–29

  ecological disaster, 320. See also climate change

  Edelman, Marian Wright, 335

  education, 16, 92, 246, 295, 297–98, 311, 322, 338

  equal opportunity in, 135, 136, 311

  femininity and, 42–43, 68, 106

  feminist, 314, 316–17

  feminization of poverty and, 19

  of girls, 19, 23, 297–98

  higher education, 19, 23, 92, 140, 338

  patriarchy and, 311

  race and, 58, 257–58 (see also Brown v. Board of Education)

  sex education, 243

  Title IX and, 8, 136, 205

  white monopoly over, 257–58

  women’s rights and, 44

  Education Amendment Act, Title IX, 8, 136, 205

  the eighties, 4, 106–7, 235–64

  feminist theory and, 269–76

  identity politics and, 235–64

  Eisenhower, Dwight D., 73–74

  Eisenhower, Mamie, 73–74

  elder care, 319

  Electoral College, 5–6

  electric shock therapy, 166

  Eliot, George, Middlemarch, 111

  Eliot, T. S., 87–88

  “Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock,” 88

  Waste Land, 87–88

  Ellis, Havelock, 41

  Ellison, Ralph, 54

  Invisible Man, 54

  EMILY’s List, 296

  employment, 135, 246, 267

  empowerment, 219

  England, Lynndie, 294–95

  Engler, Lilly, 184

  Enovid, 74–75

  Ensler, Eve, 308–11

  The Apology, 310

  marriage and, 308

  The Vagina Monologues, 308–11, 311–12

  entertainment, backlash and, 286

  environmental campaigns, 297
r />   Ephron, Nora, 207, 236, 338

  Epstein, Jeffrey, 336

  Equal Credit Opportunity Act, 8

  equality, 175, 337–38

  equality feminism, 241–42

  Equal Rights Amendment (ERA), 8, 135–36, 205, 206, 212, 214, 215, 235

  Erdrich, Louise, 328

  eroticism, 8, 43, 44–46, 61, 75, 109–10, 141, 144, 147, 159, 219, 237, 242–43, 266, 304, 315. See also sexuality

  Carson and, 276, 282

  Kraus and, 282

  Lorde and, 219–20

  pro-sex feminism and, 240, 242–43

  Rich and, 184–86

  Esquire, 105–6, 207

  essentialism, 106–7, 231, 237, 311

  ethnic identity politics, 244–49

  eurocentrism, 215

  evangelicals, 296

  Evans, Sara, 123

  Evers, Medgar, 95

  Fair Fight Action, 339

  “fake news,” 320

  Faludi, Susan, Backlash, 266–67

  Falwell, Jerry, 268, 296

  “family values,” 265

  Farber, Leslie, 177

  “He Said, She Said,” 179–80

  Farnham, Marynia, 42, 44, 47, 57, 68

  Modern Woman: The Lost Sex, 68

  Fatal Attraction, 286, 289

  Fateman, Johanna, 244

  Faulkner, William, 154

  FBI, 56, 212–13

  Feinberg, Leslie

  Stone Butch Blues, 282

  Transgender Liberation, 282

  Feinstein, Dianne, 260

  “female chauvinism,” 207

  female genital mutilation, 217, 309

  femicide, 238

  “feminazis,” 289

  feminine beauty, white-defined ideals of, 154–55

  femininity, 145–46, 189, 231, 237, 242, 282, 316

  aging and, 147–48

  education and, 42–43, 68, 106

  in fifties, 41–47

  oppression and, 147–49

  performance of, 108–9, 147–48, 192–93, 194

  feminism, 152, 214, 298

  academia and, 9–10, 23–24, 235–36, 265–76

  anti-porn feminism, 238–44

  Black feminism, 100, 262–63, 264, 320–26

  Black women and, 208–9, 218–19

  commodification of, 289

  conscious-raising and, 335–44

  cyber-feminism, 270

  demonized by Moral Majority, 296

  difference feminism, 241–42

  as a “dirty word,” 235

  ecofeminism, 270, 328–29

  in entertainment, 236

  equality feminism, 241–42

  “feminism without borders,” 311

  first-wave, 138

  French feminism, 248

  gay rights and, 269

  headlining, 332–35

  humanities and, 10

  identity politics and, 284

  as Merriam-Webster word of the year 2017, 337

  metaphors of, 137–38

  as not merely a white movement, 2, 206

  popular culture and, 20–21, 236, 285–86

  post-feminism, 19, 235–36, 260, 267

  postmodernism and, 266, 281–84

  poststructuralism and, 237–38, 265–66, 270, 284

  pro-sex feminism, 242–43

  “racist feminism,” 218–19

  renewed popularity of, 20

  resurgence of, 318–44

  second-wave, 7, 26, 125–32, 138, 176, 204, 215, 237, 304, 318

  in seventies, 7–12, 18–19, 179–80

  targeted in culture wars, 267–69

  third-wave, 260, 267

  “transnational feminism,” 311

  “waves” of, 3, 138

  white feminism, 215, 217, 218–19, 262–63, 264

  who owns feminism? 285–90

  “without borders,” 311

  “feminist Golden Age” of television, 20–22

  feminist literary criticism, 139–40

  feminist militancy, 127, 178

  feminist multiculturalism, 248–49

  feminist realist fiction, 152–64. See also specific writers

  feminist sci-fi, 188

  feminist studies, 319

  feminist theory, 269–76. See also specific theorists

  Ferrante, Elena, 318

  Ferraro, Geraldine, 236, 346

  Fey, Tina, 20

  Fiedler, Leslie, 114

  Fielding, Helen, Bridget Jones’s Diary, 287–88

  the fifties, 29–69, 106

  domesticity of, 176 (see also domesticity)

  end of, 73–75, 179

  femininity in, 41–47, 46–47

  ideology of, 84

  marriage in, 36–40, 179–80

  reproductive rights in, 46

  sexuality in, 41–47

  Figes, Eva, Patriarchal Attitudes, 144

  Finley, Karen, 268

  Firestone, Shulamith, 124, 131, 231

  The Dialectic of Sex, 140

  Fisher, Eddie, 56

  Fitzgerald, Ella, 54

  The Floating Bear, 50

  Floyd, George, 321

  Fonda, Jane, 309

  Ford, Betty, 213

  Ford, Christine Blasey, 337

  Fornes, Irene, 112

  Foucault, Michel, 270

  Fourteenth Amendment, 136

  Fraiman, Susan, 315

  Freedom magazine, 55–56

  Freeman, Jo (“Joreen”), “Trashing,” 212

  free speech, 219, 268

  Free Speech movement, 120, 130

  French, Marilyn, 138, 152–64, 153

  death of, 318

  The Women’s Room, 163–64

  French feminism, 248

  Freud, Sigmund, 41, 106, 157, 158, 241

  Freudianism, 41–43, 46, 47, 68, 157–58

  homosexuality and, 159

  lesbians and, 159

  Friday, Nancy, My Secret Garden, 8

  Friedan, Betty, 61, 66–69, 142, 144, 206, 211, 290

  death of, 318

  The Feminine Mystique, 69, 75, 168

  “feminist” mystique and, 235–36

  Steinem and, 206–7, 212

  Friedman, Vanessa, 346

  Gardner, Isabella, 30

  Garner, Margaret, 257

  Garza, Alicia, 320–21

  Gay, Roxane, 333

  gay avant-garde, 269

  gay liberation movement, 131, 141, 219–20, 269–76, 298. See also marriage equality

  gay literary canon, 272

  gay marriage, legalization of, 297

  gay men, targeted in culture wars, 267–69

  Gay Pride Day, 275

  gay rights, 214. See also gay liberation movement

  feminism and, 269

  women’s rights and, 265–66, 275

  gay separatism, 215

  gender

  gender fluidity, 314

  performance of, 274

  as social construction, 274

  gender roles, vs. anatomical sex, 140

  gender theory, 266

  Genet, Jean, 139, 140

  genre-blurring, 113

  Gentleman Jack, 312

  Georgia, 267–68, 339–40

  Ghalib, 177

  Giddings, Paula, 259

  Gilbert, Sandra M., 229–30

  The Madwoman in the Attic, 4, 7, 164, 227–30

  “The Madwoman in the Attic” course, 10–12

  The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women, 11–12, 60

  Gillibrand, Kirsten, 20

  Gilligan, Carol, 241, 311

  Why Does Patriarchy Persist? 311

  Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, 187

  Herland, 187, 194–95

  “The Yellow Wallpaper,” 11, 187

  Ginsberg, Allen, 67

  “Howl,” 48–49

  Ginsburg, Ruth Bader, 8

  Giovanni, Nikki, 120

  Gitlin, Todd, 119

  Glamour, 314

  glass c
eilings, 9, 19, 345–52

  Godard, Jean-Luc, 177

  Goldberg, Michelle, 334

  Goldberg, Whoopi, 309

  Goldman, Ronald, 261–62

  Goldwater, Barry, 13, 25

  Gordon, Mary, 210

  Gore, Al, 293–94

  Gorman, Amanda, 353

  Gornick, Vivian, 204

  “Why Women Fear Success,” 206

  Grable, Betty, 13, 37

  Graham, Ellen, 228

  graphic novels, 298–304

  Great Migration, 52

  Greer, Germaine, 314

  The Female Eunuch, 144

  Griffin, Susan, 221

  Griswold v. Connecticut, 103

  Guantánamo Bay, prison at, 294

  The Guardian, 169–70

  Gubar, Susan

  The Madwoman in the Attic, 4, 7, 164, 227–30

  “The Madwoman in the Attic” course, 10–12

  The Norton Anthology of Literature by Women, 11–12, 60

  Guerrilla Girls, 236

  Hacker, Marilyn, 75

  Hall, Radclyffe, The Well of Loneliness, 158–59

  Handler, Ruth, 67

  The Handmaid’s Tale (TV show), 20–22

  Hanisch, Carol, 211

  Hanna, Kathleen, “Riot Grrrl Manifesto,” 281

  Hansberry, Carl A., 58

  Hansberry, Lorraine, 29, 54–62, 66, 67, 75, 95

  divorce and, 61

  “Flag from a Kitchenette Window, 54

  Les Blancs, 61

  marriage and, 56

  “The Negro Writer and His Roots,” 60

  A Raisin in the Sun, 54, 57–60

  “The Sign in Jenny Reed’s Window,” 61

  The Sign in Sidney Brustein’s Window, 61

  Simone and, 95, 101

  Hansberry, Nannie, 58

  Haraway, Donna, 270, 283

  “A Cyborg Manifesto,” 284

  Hardwick, Elizabeth, 144, 178

  Hardwick, Michael, 268

  Harjo, Joy, 328

  Harlem Renaissance, 209, 325

  Harris, Donald, 347–48

  Harris, Kamala, 4, 345–53

  Harris, Maya, 348

  Harris, Shyamala, 347–48

  Haskell, Molly, 1

  hate crimes, 297, 320

  Hayden, Casey, 128–29

  HBCUs (historically black colleges and universities), 335

  Heap, Jane, 304

  Hefner, Hugh, 67, 104, 105, 206

  Heilbrun, Carolyn, 112, 213, 228, 318–19

  Toward a Recognition of Androgyny, 200

  Helen of Troy, 174

  Helms, Jesse, 268–69

  Hemingway, Ernest, 264

  Herz, Alice, 119

  Hester, Rita, 284

  heteronormativity, 270

  heterosexuality, 149, 179, 180, 237, 240

  compulsory, 183, 184, 186, 266, 274

  in fiction of the seventies, 153

  hostility toward, 242

  higher education, 19, 23, 92, 140, 338. See also academia

  democratization of, 338

  humanities in, 10, 319

  Hill, Anita, 259–61, 266, 336, 337

  “HIS AND HER time,” 36–40

  Hitchcock, Alfred, 197–98

  The Hite Report, 8

  HIV, 236–37, 267

  Hochschild, Arlie, The Second Shift, 319

 

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