Results 331 to 340 of about 3,457,101 (390)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
Interpreting Women, War, and Feminism
2018Chapter 2 foregrounds the discussion of policy impact by individual foreign policy leaders. It explores the varied perspectives toward war and equality that are associated with women in Western cultures. The discussion shows how efforts to present half of humanity as a homogeneous unit have fallen short—whether those attempts portray the group as ...
openaire +1 more source
Women's work: The feminizing of composition
Rhetoric Review, 1991(1991). Women's work: The feminizing of composition. Rhetoric Review: Vol. 9, No. 2, pp. 201-229.
openaire +2 more sources
WOMEN HOLLERING TRANSFRONTERIZA FEMINISMS
Cultural Studies, 1999The publication of texts by Chicana feminists in the 1980s offered an alternative mapping of feminist literary cartographies and subject positions. This article examines the work of contemporary Chicana writer, Sandra Cisneros, whose literary text enacts a practice of Chicana feminism that engages with a transnational, transfronteriza practice of ...
openaire +2 more sources
Dalit Women and Feminism in India
SSRN Electronic Journal, 2013Out of the 22 million population of the country it is estimated that the total population of Dalits is 20% (CERD !(1997) of which Dalit women occupy half of that population. Except for a few, the total segment of this population leads a miserable life. Dalit women have been active throughout history, though often this has not been recorded.
openaire +2 more sources
Feminism and women's sense of humor
Sex Roles, 1996The present study empirically examined the long-standing folk belief that women, especially feminist women, have no sense of humor. Svebak's (1974) revised Sense of Humor Questionnaire [SHQ; (1974b) “Revised Questionnaire on the Sense of Humor,” Scandinavian Journal of Psychology, Vol. 15, pp.
openaire +2 more sources
Is feminism relevant to Arab women?
Third World Quarterly, 2004This paper discusses the effects of feminism, nationalism and colonialism on modern Arab women. These three elements are seen as interconnected in the Arab world, as in many other developing countries. However, even though early Arab feminist consciousness developed hand in hand with national consciousness, feminism is an indigenous product of Arabic ...
openaire +2 more sources
Feminism and Women’s Political Representation
2015That women remain under-represented in legislatures across the world is a fact readily acknowledged by popular texts on feminism (Wolf, 1994: 11; Banyard, 2010: 5; Bates, 2014: 48). As a feminist issue, it is usually framed as symptomatic of patriarchal power structures, typically appearing as part of a statistical list of gender inequalities (gender ...
openaire +2 more sources
Discourses from without, discourses from within: women, feminism and voice in Africa
, 2011K. Heugh
semanticscholar +1 more source