Embracing microfeminism starts with recognizing the subtle forms of sexism that might go unnoticed but are still impactful.
This is the seventh entry in an ongoing series exploring Jewish feminism. As a child in the 1940s and ’50s, I unknowingly experienced Jewish feminism before it really existed. Beginning in 1938 my ...
British writer Mary Harrington has emerged as one of the most thought-provoking feminist critics of our time, precisely because she questions the very assumptions that modern feminism holds most dear.
When first-year Nasya Allen was taught about women’s history before coming to UNC, women who looked like her were often not featured. White women, she said, were usually the center of that education. ...
The Center for the Study of Spirituality at Saint Mary's College hosted theologian and author Julie Rubio on Tuesday evening ...
As Angell Hall first grants me escape from the harsh Ann Arbor wind, I am immediately subjected to a barrage of flyers that are extreme even by collegiate standards of political correctness. They read ...
Margaret Thatcher was a challenge to most feminists, myself included. She was well into her second term as Britain’s first woman prime minister when I moved to London as a foreign correspondent.
Some millennials will remember waiting on the 10,000-person waiting list for their Boy Brow, or standing in the long queue outside the flagship store in Soho for their chance to be a Glossier girl.
When Patricia Azcagorta ran as a candidate for mayor of Caborca, Sonora, in Mexico in 2018, a video was circulated on social media of a woman dancing in her underwear, together with photos of ...
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