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Author Rhodes, Jacqueline, 1965-

Title Radical feminism, writing, and critical agency : from manifesto to modem / Jacqueline Rhodes.

Imprint Albany : State University of New York Press, c2005.

Copies

Location Call No. OPAC Message Status
 Axe 3rd Floor Stacks  305.42 R346r 2005    ---  Available
Description ix, 130 p. ; 23 cm.
Series SUNY series in feminist criticism and theory
SUNY series in feminist criticism and theory.
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references (p. 115-125) and index.
Contents 1. Feminism, composition, and re-history -- Foucault, feminism, and genealogy -- The metaphysics of "women's ways" of writing -- Present tense: what's still missing -- 2. Rewriting radical women -- Definition, dissensus, and disunity -- Consciousness-raising and the problem of (anti)structure -- Radical feminist manifestos and media -- Textual action and radical feminist legacies -- 3. From manifesto to modem -- Separatist cyberspace -- Radical textuality online -- 4. Textuality, performativity, and network literacies -- Critical textual agency and the engaged classroom -- Cultural studies, passing, and interruption as agency -- The problem of community -- Network and collective literacies: three views.
Summary "This book traces the intersection of radical feminism, composition, and print culture in order to address a curious gap in feminist composition studies: the manifesto-writing, collaborative-action-taking radical feminists of the 1960s and 1970s. Long before contemporary debates over essentialism, radical feminist groups questioned both what it was to be a woman and to perform womanhood, and a key part of that questioning took the form of very public, very contentious texts by such writers and groups as Shulamith Firestone, the Redstockings, and WITCH (the Women's International Terrorist Conspiracy from Hell). Rhodes explores how these radical women's texts have been silenced in contemporary rhetoric and composition, and compares their work to that of contemporary online activists, finding that both point to a "network literacy" that blends ever-shifting identities with ever-changing technologies in order to take action. Ultimately, Rhodes argues, the articulation of radical feminist textuality can benefit both scholarship and classroom as it situates writers as rhetorical agents who can write, resist, and finally act within a network of discourses and identifications."--BOOK JACKET.
Subject Feminist theory.
Feminism.
Radicalism.
ISBN 0791462919 (alk. paper)
9780791462911 (alk. paper)
0791462927 (pbk. : alk. paper)
9780791462928 (pbk. : alk. paper)

 
    
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