In the prologue to “Women of Color and Feminism,” Maythee Rojas writes that “social injustice — whether we cause it, are hurt by it, or happen to benefit from its effects — dehumanizes all of us.” ...
With her new album, Beyoncé has become the embodiment of modern feminism for a generation that has been reluctant to claim the word. Forget the angry cries of sexism. Millennials have grown up ...
Amelia F. Barnum ’28, a Crimson Editorial editor, is a Social Studies concentrator in Winthrop House. Isabel C. Hogben ’29, a Crimson Editorial comper, lives in Greenough Hall. When it comes to Women ...
A frank discussion among five Bates alumnae who’ve made significant contributions to women in sports illuminated how their experiences on courses, courts, and playing fields — including the hurdles ...
“Alexis Pauline Gumbs pushes us out of our comfort zone and into the sea, where other species are moving and mothering in ways that can teach us how to survive. With her beautifully rendered ...
In recent weeks, the Women's Affairs Reform Commission submitted a report with 433 recommendations, including proposals for equal rights in inheritance, marriage, and divorce. These recommendations ...
Jamil—seemingly incapable of letting a news cycle pass her by—gave us a Feminism 101 lesson after calling Blake Lively a ...
The all-day event celebrates and honors Ms. Magazine, the seminal publication that has explored solutions and pathways toward gender justice across America for five decades. Attend keynote ...
Late in episode 5, the eight-part “Lessons in Chemistry” suddenly turns wonderful. Elizabeth Zott (Brie Larson), the world-class chemist who has been deprived of opportunity, dignity and love, ascends ...
There’s a lot of history packed into the slightly faded color photograph that Lorraine Fontana, a self-described “socialist anti-racist lesbian feminist,” shared with LGBTQ Nation. Fontana snapped the ...
The joy of Bonnie Garmus' 2022 bestseller Lessons in Chemistry has less to do with its ideas than how she presents them. The novel's central tenet — that women have long been overlooked and mistreated ...
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