Listening Up: Students Blow the Whistle on Sexual Violence
by Stephanie Gilmore and Sarah Barr As women – a faculty member and a student – at Dickinson College, a top-tier, selective liberal arts college
by Stephanie Gilmore and Sarah Barr As women – a faculty member and a student – at Dickinson College, a top-tier, selective liberal arts college
by Megan Carpentier When my parents instilled in me the belief that I could do anything a boy could do, I’m not sure they really
by Eleanor Bader When I was growing up, my father had two favorite words, ignoramus and moron. He hurled them at my mother for any-and-all
by Resa Crane Bizzaro If I ask my students to write about someone they admire, chances are they’ll write about their mothers, grandmothers, or great-grandmothers.
by Maame-Mensima Horne I was raised in a feminist household where I was exposed to feminism and its theory early. I realized my grandfather was
by Susan Feiner As a feminist economist I am constantly amazed—though I suppose I should be used to it by now—by the ways conventional analyses
by Carol Hanisch Consciousness-raising was birthed as a mass-organizing tool for the liberation of women in 1968 when the country and the world were seething
By Elayne Clift Ive always felt ambivalent about Nicolas Kristofs columns in The New York Times, even though they have exposed so effectively the tragic
By Myriam Miedzian The issue of violence touches me in a very personal and profound way. I am a Holocaust child survivor. While my parents
by Emily Rand Breitner The Courage of Anne It doesnt matter whatlittle Charlie did to provokehis father, but probablynot much for the manto whip off
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