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Rosita Sweetman joins Myles to look back on the Irish Women's Liberation Movement she co-founded in the early 1970s.
Set in London in 1970, this British Drama looks at what happened when the Women's Liberation Movement took on the Miss World pageant. In this Q&A with director Philippa Lowthorpe find out why the character's individual stories were such a gift to her as a filmmaker, how they got the 70s look for the film and more. Hosted by Mariayah Kaderbhai.
This week we're chatting about new movie Misbehaviour, directed by Philippa Lowthorpe and starring three of our favourite actors: Keira Knightley, Gugu Mbatha-Raw and Jessie Buckley. This British film is based on the real life events of the 1970 Miss World Contest, where the newly-formed Women's Liberation Movement disrupted proceedings, while Jennifer Hosten, Miss Grenada, was crowned the first black Miss World winner. We were so excited to sit down with director Philippa Lowthorpe and discuss her role bringing this true life story to the big screen. The three of us fangirled about Little Women, talked about the importance of intersectionality on screen, the transformative power of clothing and why women want to see their stories reflected in film. Later, Helena fills us in about her experience finally watching Netflix's Sex Education, and Francesca has some thoughts on musical classic Les Miserables. Enjoy!
In this podcast, Susan Hawthorne speaks to FiLiA about her work in researching violence against lesbians. Susan joined the Women's Liberation Movement in 1973, the Collective of Melbourne's Rape Crisis Centre in 1974 and has been involved in many different areas including as an aerialist in the Performing Older Women's Circus, organising writers festivals and feminist conferences. She is the author of fifteen books: three fiction, nine poetry and three non-fiction. In Uganda in 2002, a woman said to her, "Be careful, in Uganda lesbians are tortured." This set her on the path to researching why she had not heard this before. From 2003 onwards she has written numerous research papers, spoken on the subject of the torture of lesbians at conferences in India, New Zealand, South Africa, Canada, South Korea, USA and Australia to almost no effect. In 2017, her novel Dark Matters was published. She hopes one day to reach a wider audience. Her poetry collections The Butterfly Effect (2005), Cow (2011) Lupa and Lamb (2014) and The Sacking of the Muses (2019) also deal with violence against lesbians and the importance of lesbian culture.She spoke at the FiLiA conference in 2019 on two panels: violence against lesbians and feminist publishing.Twitter @susanhaRead Dark MattersFind out more about Susan and her workSpinifex Press Website, Facebook and Twitter
Today's discussion focuses on Today's generation of fathers who have stepped up in the household with chores, with the raising of their children, and showing love and affection to their wife, but still not receive an increase in recognition for their actions. We ask the question, who benefited from the women's liberation movement. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/newschooldaddy/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/newschooldaddy/support
Magazyn NN6T #122 poleca: Set przygotowany przez kolektyw Synergia z okazji HER Docs www.facebook.com/herdocs – pierwszego w Polsce festiwalu Filmów Dokumentalnych autorstwa kobiet, wspieranego promocyjnie także przez naszą redakcję www.nn6t.pl Synergia: Sisterhood/Siostrzeństwo, cześć 2 Gloria Steinem, Wykład na Stanford University (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N9yrEglT84c) Annette Peacock - My Mama Never Taught Me How to Cook Minnie Riperton - I’m a Woman Antena - To Climb a Cliff Hillary Clinton, Przemówienie podczas Fourth Women's Conference w Beijing w 1995 roku (https://youtu.be/xXM4E23Efvk) Ibeyi - No Man Is Big Enough for My Arms Madame Gandhi - The Future is Female Sampa The Great - Energy Theodora Ifudu - Hello There! Fabian - Prophecy Alice Walker, Odczyt przemówienia abolicjonistki Sojourner Truth z 1851 roku (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EsjdLL3MrKk) The Staple Singers - On My Way to Heaven Nina Simone - Backlash Blues Mary Lou Williams - Praise the Lord Gloster Williams & Master Control - No Cross, No Crown Angela Davis, Wykład na Universidad de Costa Rica (https://youtu.be/sNIgsic3k0k) Jackie Shane - Any Other Way (https://pitchfork.com/news/jackie-shane-soul-singer-and-transgender-pioneer-dead-at-78/) Linn Da Quebrada - A Lenda (http://www.dazeddigital.com/music/article/41083/1/linn-da-quebrada-brazilian-rapper-film) Quarteto Em Cy & Tamba Trio - Aleluia LAY - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S0SNPHqMm0E Andrea D - Kiuá Papete - Promessa de Pescador Yoko Ono - Sisters o Sisters Saada Bonaire - More Women Carmel - Sticks & Stones Asma Khan, Wywiad Magdy Maksimiuk dzięki uprzejmości autorki Aphrodite's Child - Loud, Loud, Loud Pierwszy marsz Women's Liberation Movement z 1971 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4ZeowophZe8) Plakat: Martyna Wędzicka www.wedzicka.com
Jesus came to set the oppressed free, and there was no people group more oppressed than women in his day. In fact, Jesus began the women’s liberation movement!
On this last episode of season one, we are going out with a bang! March has been dedicated to the ladies and this episode is all about the freedom and equality Jesus purchased for us in his curse-defying death and resurrection. Us ladies have been set free again into a Garden of Eden where patriarchy, inferiority, and limitations based solely on gender no longer exist. That being so, who are we now supposed to be? Whoever the heck God has made us to be. Celebrate your freedom ladies and walk in it. Let nothing purchased go unused and wasted. Be who God made you to be! *Be sure to follow us on Instagram @walkingwellpodcast to stay up to date on the podcast’s return, resources, quotes, and community! Episode Resource Kris Vallotton- Fashioned to Reign Taffi Dollar- Gender Roles Kris Vallotton- Jesus Founder of the Women's Liberation Movement: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7dAFvc3znQU&t=1460s EzerRising.com- website dedicated to empowering women, calling churches higher, challenging culture, and making a bigger table where all are welcome.
On the publication of the first complete edition of Leonora Carrington's short fiction,The Debutante and Other Stories (Silver Press) and the republication of her memoir Down Below in this centenary year of her birth, cultural critic Marina Warner and novelist Chloe Aridjis discussed Carrington's absurd, funny and provocative fiction and paintings. Carrington first started to paint and draw among Surrealists in Paris in the 1930s, escaped the war via New York to Mexico City where she met Diego Riviera, Frida Kahlo and Octavio Paz and became involved in the Women's Liberation Movement. Warner, who came to know Carrington in the 1980s in New York, and Aridjis, Carrington's friend from Mexico City, discussed the life and legacy of a singular artist and writer with Silver Press publishers Joanna Biggs and Alice Spawls. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We, the men and women raised in the 1960s and 70s, are the first generation to grow up expected to adopt the "She can have it all" mantra. How'd that work out?
Institute of Historical Research I never wanted to participate in a charity: Women's relationship to voluntary work within the UK Women's Liberation Movement Dr Bridget Lockyer (Canterbury Christ Church University) This seminar considers the ...
Jesus The Founder Of The Women's Liberation Movement by Kris Vallotton
On 6 March, 1971, UCL students participated in the first ever national Women's Liberation Movement march in London. The University College Film Soc was on hand to record audio interviews with students on the march.