Results for 'Women and communism'

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  1.  8
    Women and Their “Radiant Future”: Construction of Communism in the USSR in Women’s Letters to the Government.Alexandr Fokin - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:285-298.
    In 1961, at the 22nd Congress of the Communist Party of the Soviet Union, a new program of the C.P.S.U. was adopted. The adoption of the Third Program of the C.P.S.U. was accompanied by a “nationwide discussion”. People expressed their opinions regarding the draft of the new Program at meetings and lectures and in their letters to various institutions. Naturally, not all the women actively demanded changes; for some there was probably no such thing as “women’s communism”. (...)
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  2.  10
    Smiling Women and Fighting Men: The Gender of the Communist Subject in State Socialist Hungary.Éva Fodor - 2002 - Gender and Society 16 (2):240-263.
    The gendered assumptions embedded in the construction of the rational individual are well established in Western feminist thought but inapplicable to describe societies operating on different principles, such as East European state socialism. This article identifies the communist subject as the building block of communist political ideology and argues that this formulation was no less male biased than its counterpart, the rational individual under liberal capitalism. In state socialist Hungary this male bias came to be expressed differently: Women were (...)
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  3.  7
    Maszyny Matematyczne, women, and computing: The birth of computers in the Polish communist era.Carla Petrocelli - 2023 - History of Science 61 (3):409-435.
    The history of computing usually focuses on achievements in Western universities and research centers and is mostly about what happened in the United States and Great Britain. However, in Eastern Europe, particularly in war-torn Poland, where there was very little state funding, many highly original hardware and software projects were initiated. The small number of publications available to us, especially those in English, led to the belief that technological progress was the result of research carried out in Western countries alone. (...)
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  4.  8
    Eastern Feminism? Some Considerations on Women and Religion in a Post-Communist Context.Márta Bodó - 2015 - Feminist Theology 24 (1):23-34.
    In the context of mainstream feminism, Eastern-European women, coming from a post-Communist context are overwhelmed. As they have been unable to access the newest developments of feminist thought, feminist theology, they cannot find their own place and voice. In order to overcome this state of mind, this article puts forward an approach and a strategy. Drawing from the main ideas of contemporary Romanian and Transylvanian feminists – Mihaela Mudure, Mihaela Miroiu, Réka Geambasu, Enikő Magyari-Vincze and others – the article (...)
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  5.  63
    Women and Religion.Codruta Cuceu - 2011 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 10 (29):203-210.
    Review of Márta Bodó (ed.), Women and Religion, (Cluj: Verbum, 2009).
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  6.  15
    Rhetoric and Ritual: Neo-Protestant Women and Gender Equality in Communist Romania.Iemima Ploscariu - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:147-166.
    In communist Romania, as in other Central and East European communist countries, women became fellow workers in the building of the new proletariat state. However, there was a discrepancy between state rhetoric and the treatment of women in reality. Though not the most targeted faith group in communist Romania, neo-Protestant women faced, nevertheless, multiple levels of marginalization, due to their sex and to their religion. These women re-appropriated the state’s gender equality rhetoric and, along with their (...)
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  7.  16
    The Season of Transgression Is Over?: The Union of Italian Women and the Italian Communist Party: Reaction, Negotiation and Sanctioned Struggles in Local and Global Context 1944-1963.Rachele Ledda - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:211-228.
    This contribution aims to outline the birth and development of the Unione Donne Italiane in regard to its relations with the Partito Comunista Italiano from 1944 to 1963.The present research has drawn mainly from archival sources.UDI was born as a multi-party women’s organization but the hegemony of the Communist women would de facto bring it under the influence of the PCI. The Italian Communist Party tried to perform a normative and normalizing task. By the logic of the Cold (...)
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  8. Aristotle's Criticism of Plato's Communism of Women and Children.Robert Mayhew - 1996 - Apeiron 29 (3):231 - 248.
  9.  21
    The Big Contradiction. Feminism and Communism in the Magazine Lotta Continua. 1968-1978.Graziano Mamone - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:37-61.
    A new feminist ideology can be outlined by examining the magazine “Lotta Continua”, official newspaper of the homonymous Italian extra-parliamentary group. Riots in factories and universities were closely reported in the magazine, which painted a society still affected by strong gender inequalities. Split between an opposition to official communism and the spontaneity of the working class conflict, women emerged from family isolation. The great achievements of the Italian feminist movement were reported according to the point of view of (...)
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  10.  24
    Comrade First, Baba Second: State Violence against Women in Communist Romania.Luciana M. Jinga - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:63-86.
    The paper focuses on the manifestations of structural and symbolic violence against women during the communist regime by addressing the most important mechanisms and embedded beliefs that allowed the proliferation of spousal violence in communist Romania, in what I see as a continuation of the interwar patriarchal state, and a bridge to the new discriminatory policies developed by the democratic structures, after 1990.
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  11.  11
    Women Communists and the Polish Communist Party: from “Fanatic” Revolutionaries to Invisible Bureaucrats.Natalia Jarska - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:189-210.
    The paper aims at tracing a collective portrait and the trajectories of a group of about forty women active in the communist movement after Poland had regained independence, and after the Second World War. I explore the relations between gender, communist activity, and the changing circumstances of the communist movement. I argue that interwar activities shaped women communists as radical, uncompromising, and questioning traditional femininity political agents, accepted as comrades at every organisational level. This image and identity, though, (...)
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  12. Civil Society and "Women's Movements" in Post-Communist Europe. An Appraisal 25 Years after the Fall of the Berlin Wall.Yvanka B. Raynova - 2015 - In Community, Praxis, and Values in a Postmetaphysical Age: Studies on Exclusion and Social Integration in Feminist Theory and Contemporary Philosophy. Axia Academic Publishers. pp. 184-204.
    The aim of the article is to argue the thesis that, 25 years after the fall of communism, with the exception of former Yugoslavia, there has been and still is, a lack of „women’s movements“ in the post-communist countries. The author also proposes some explanations as to why there are dozens of women’s organizations but no women’s movements. In order to support her thesis, Raynova emphasizes the difference between “women’s movements”, “feminist movements” and “social movements”, (...)
     
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  13.  17
    Women Philosophers in Communist Socialism: The Case of Croatian Women Philosophers in Years 1945–1989.Luka Boršić & Ivana Skuhala Karasman - 2023 - European Journal of Analytic Philosophy 19 (1):3-32.
    The text presents an analysis of the situation with women philosophers in Croatia during the communist socialist period (1945 – 1989). The analysis is concentrated on two aspects: receiving doctorate degrees in philosophy and publications. Our analysis shows that during that period, women philosophers were proportionally approximately on the level of today’s women philosophers in western countries, including present-day Republic of Croatia by both criteria, i.e. the number of doctors of philosophy and the number of publications. Communist (...)
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  14.  7
    Violence and Violation: Women and Secure Settings1.Kate Noble Women & Gill Aitken - 2001 - Feminist Review 68 (1):68-88.
    This article focuses on service provision for women who are involuntarily referred under the UK Mental Health Act (1983) into medium and high security care in England and Wales. We explore how physical and procedural security in such settings is prioritized over relational care (see also Fallon Report, Department of Health, 1999a and NHS Executive, 2000 – Tilt Report). We are not arguing against the importance of protecting the public from the acts of dangerous members of our society. However, (...)
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  15.  28
    Gender Equality and Conflicting Attitudes Toward Women in Post-Communist Romania.Vlad Oprica - 2008 - Human Rights Review 9 (1):29-40.
    The idea of gender equality has been and still is an exogenous concept in Romanian culture. Initially introduced and institutionalized by communist ideology after World War II along with other utopian egalitarian principles, gender equality remains to this day a somewhat alien concept in practice for the majority of the Romanian population. Nevertheless, in the early twenty-first century, with renewed economic growth and more liberal governance in Romania, the gender equality debate has intensified, and multiple advocacies now compete on the (...)
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  16.  18
    Virgin Warriors and Brave Mothers: the Pantheon of Communist Women in Exile.Mercedes Yusta - 2009 - Clio 30:99-117.
    Les femmes communistes espagnoles reconstituèrent leur organisation en 1945, dans l’exil français, afin de mobiliser les réfugiées dans la résistance antifranquiste. Les figures d’héroïnes évoquées dans la revue Mujeres Antifascistas Españolas, tiennent une place importante dans la culture politique de ces femmes. Des récits, où réalité et fiction se mêlent, mettent en scène vierges guerrières et mères héroïques. Si l’héroïsation individuelle ou collective (les treize roses de Madrid) confine parfois au mythe, sans remettre en cause le système traditionnel de genre, (...)
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  17.  19
    Communism as a Generational Herstory: Reading Post-Stalinist Memoirs of Polish Communist Women.Agnieszka Mrozik - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:261-284.
    The objective of this article is to revise the dominating narrative of communism as male generational history. With the aid of memoirs of communist women, many of whom started their political activity before WWII and belonged to the power-wielding elites of Stalinist Poland, the author shows that the former constituted an integral part of the generation which had planned a revolution and ultimately took over power. Their texts were imbued with a matrilineal perspective on the history of (...): the authors emphasized that other women had strongly motivated them to become involved in politics. However, the memoirs revealed something more: as an attempt to establish new models of emancipation and to transmit them to younger generations of women, they were to rekindle the memory of women as the active agent of that part of Polish history which contemporary feminists refuse to remember. (shrink)
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  18.  18
    Malgorzata Fidelis, Women, Communism, and Industrialization in Postwar Poland.Alix Heiniger - 2011 - Clio 34:14-14.
    En tant qu’idéologie, le communisme promeut l’égalité entre femmes et hommes. Cependant celles-ci sont régulièrement un objet de méfiance de la part des cadres des partis communistes parce qu’elles sont considérées comme plus proches des traditions religieuses et difficiles à intégrer dans les rangs des partis. Elles ne représentent jamais la moitié des effectifs de ceux-ci. En Europe de l’Est et à la fin de la Seconde Guerre mondiale, la création des Démocraties Populaires permet aux partis...
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  19. Racism in Pornography and the Women's Movement.Representing Women - 1994 - In Alison M. Jaggar (ed.), Living with Contradictions: Controversies in Feminist Social Ethics. Westview Press. pp. 171.
  20. Diverse Voices: Czech Women’s Writing in the Post-Communist Era.Elena Sokol - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):37-58.
    This essay offers an overview of the diversity of women’s prose writing that emerged on the Czech cultural scene in the post-communist era. To that end it briefly characterizes the work of eight Czech women authors who were born within the first two decades after World War II and began to create during the post-1968 era of ‘normalization’. In this broad sense they belong to a single generation. With rare exception their work was not officially published in their (...)
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  21.  21
    From Party Leaders to Social Outcasts: Women’s Political Activism during the Establishment of Communist Power in a Polish Industrial Town.Jan A. Burek - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:167-188.
    The author presents the changing role of women and of the attitudes towards them in the PWP and the PSP in a midsize industrial town in Central Poland in the years 1945-1948. During the war, women of the PWP were promoted to the highest positions in the party structures, however, due to the quick reaffirmation of gender roles in the post-1945 period, they were relegated to lower posts. Their political influence was thereafter limited solely to the care sector (...)
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  22.  19
    Feminist Readings of Early Modern Culture: Emerging Subjects.Frederick G. L. Huetwell Professor of English and Women'S. Studies Valerie Traub, Valerie Traub, Callaghan Dympna, M. Lindsay Kaplan & Dympna Callaghan - 1996 - Cambridge University Press.
    How did the events of the early modern period affect the way gender and the self were represented? This collection of essays attempts to respond to this question by analysing a wide spectrum of cultural concerns - humanism, technology, science, law, anatomy, literacy, domesticity, colonialism, erotic practices, and the theatre - in order to delineate the history of subjectivity and its relationship with the postmodern fragmented subject. The scope of this analysis expands the terrain explored by feminist theory, while its (...)
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  23. Discovering Masculine Bias.No Great Women Artists & Linda Nochlin - 1994 - In Anne Herrmann & Abigail J. Stewart (eds.), Theorizing Feminism: Parallel Trends in the Humanities and Social Sciences. Westview Press.
     
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  24. Call for a new approach.Committee On Women, Population & The Environment - 2011 - In Sandra G. Harding (ed.), The Postcolonial Science and Technology Studies Reader. Duke University Press.
     
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  25.  7
    Revolutionary desires: women, communism, and feminism in India by Ania Loomba. [REVIEW]Priyanka Tripathi - 2020 - Feminist Theory 21 (4):520-522.
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  26. Stefan bratosin Mihaela Alexandra Ionescu.Post-Communist Romania - 2009 - Journal for the Study of Religions and Ideologies 8 (24):3-18.
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  27.  9
    Revolutionary desires: women, communism, and feminism in India by Ania Loomba. [REVIEW]Priyanka Tripathi - 2020 - Feminist Theory 21 (4):520-522.
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  28.  11
    Communism and feminism.Brigitte Studer - 2015 - Clio 41:139-152.
    L’article porte sur le rapport entre communisme et féminisme dans l’entre-deux-guerres en prenant comme point de départ un débat transnational entre chercheuses d’horizons divers, débat paru dans une revue sur l’histoire des femmes et du genre dans les pays d’Europe de l’Est fondée récemment. Trois approches différentes permettent d’éclairer la position ambiguë du féminisme dans les organisations communistes et l’Internationale communiste. Dans un premier temps, ce sont les opportunités et les limites de l’égalité formelle offerte aux femmes communistes qui sont (...)
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  29. Conceptualizing Generation and Transformation in Women’s Writing.Urszula Chowaniec & Marzenna Jakubczak - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):5-16.
    The main objective of this collection of papers is to explore ideas of generation and transformation in the context of postdependency discourse as it may be traced in women’s writing published in Bengali, Polish, Czech, Russian and English. As we believe, literature does not have merely a descriptive function or a purely visionary quality but serves also as a discursive medium, which is rhetorically sophisticated, imaginatively influential and stimulates cultural dynamics. It is an essential carrier of collective memory and (...)
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  30.  8
    Fighting their War during a “Foreign” War: Women anti-Fascist/Communist Activism during World War II in Romania.Ştefan Bosomitu - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:229-258.
    The article discusses this intricate issue of women’s anti-Fascist/communist activism during World War II in Romania. I am particularly interested in the relationship that developed between the Romanian Communist Party and the women who joined the movement in the complicated context of World War II. The article is attempting to assess whether women’s increased involvement in the communist organization was due to the previous and continuous politics of the RCP, or it was a mere consequence of unprecedented (...)
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  31.  6
    National context and gender ideology: Attitudes toward women's employment in hungary and the united states.April Brayfield & Evelina Panayotova - 1997 - Gender and Society 11 (5):627-655.
    This study uses a comparative framework to examine the relationship between individual-level attributes and gender-role attitudes in a state-market society and in a capitalist society. Data from the 1988 International Social Science Program indicate significant differences in attitudes between the two populations. Both women and men in the United States were more supportive of women's employment than their counterparts in Hungary, despite the Hungarian government's policy of full employment during communist rule. Nevertheless, the level of agreement between (...) and men was uniform across national contexts: Women were more supportive of women's employment than men. We also found that individual-level attributes, such as employment status and marital status, differentially affected gender-role attitudes in the two countries. This study contributes to a broader dialogue about the dynamic relationship between social structure and gender ideology. (shrink)
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  32. Gender justice and the welfare state in post-communism.Anca Gheaus - 2008 - Feminist Theory 9 (2):185-206.
    Some Romanian feminist scholars argue that welfare policies of post-communist states are deeply unjust to women and preclude them from reaching economic autonomy. The upshot of this argument is that liberal economic policy would advance feminist goals better than the welfare state. How should we read this dissonance between Western and some Eastern feminist scholarship concerning distributive justice? I identify the problem of dependency at the core of a possible debate about feminism and welfare. Worries about how decades of (...)
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  33.  51
    Woman Skin Deep: Feminism and the Postcolonial Condition.Sara Suleri & Women Skin Deep - 1992 - Critical Inquiry 18 (4):756-769.
  34.  39
    Gender Politics and Post-Communism: Reflections from Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union.Nanette Funk - 1993 - Hypatia 8 (4):160-164.
    Introduction to the special cluster of articles by feminists from Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union.
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  35.  3
    Women's Reproductive Lives as a Symbolic Resource in Central and Eastern Europe.Jenny Hockey & Rachel Alsop - 2001 - European Journal of Women's Studies 8 (4):454-471.
    When Communism collapsed in Central and Eastern Europe women seemed to lose the control they had gained over their reproductive lives. Abortion rights became more limited as did access to childcare and maternity benefits. The authors argue that this picture conceals two key points. First, the effects of both Communism and post-Communism for women's reproductive lives need to be understood as byproducts of state initiatives geared towards the fulfilment of quite different political goals – and (...)
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  36.  23
    (Re)Building democracy without women: gender and politics in postcommunist Romania.Ionela Băluţă - 2015 - Clio 41:187-200.
    La (re)construction démocratique de l’espace politique roumain après la chute du régime communiste est marquée par une très faible présence des femmes dans les institutions politiques. Cet article interroge cet « évanouissement » des femmes, en le mettant en rapport à la fois avec les logiques de (re)configuration des élites politiques postcommunistes et avec la (re)construction des représentations et des rôles de genre, insistant notamment sur le caractère inaudible et illégitime de la revendication égalitaire dans la Roumanie d’après 1989.
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  37.  5
    Book Reviews : The Changing Position of Women in Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union: Shirin Rai, Hilary Pilkington and Annie Phizacklea (eds) Women in the Face of Change: The Soviet Union, Eastern Europe and China London: Routledge, 1992, x + 227 pp., name and subject indexes, ISBN 0-415- 07541-6, p/bk. Chris Corrin (ed.) Superwomen and the Double Burden: Women's Experience of Change in Central and Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union London: Scarlet Press, 1992, 297 pp., bibliography, index, ISBN 1-85727-095-9, p/bk. Nanette Funk and Magda Mueller (eds) Gender Politics and Post-Communism: Reflections from Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union London: Routledge, 1993, x + 349 pp., index, ISBN 0-415-90478-1, p/bk. Valentine M. Moghadam (ed.) Democratic Reform and the Position of Women in Transitional Economies Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1993, ix + 366 pp., index, ISBN 0-19-828820-4. [REVIEW]Wendy Bracewell - 1994 - European Journal of Women's Studies 1 (2):280-283.
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  38.  5
    Frozen children and despairing embryos in the ‘new’ post-communist state: The debate on IVF in the context of Poland’s transition.Magdalena Radkowska-Walkowicz - 2014 - European Journal of Women's Studies 21 (4):399-414.
    In vitro fertilization technology has been in use in Poland for over 25 years with success and social approval, but it is still not regulated under Polish law. The current debate over different non-medical aspects of reproductive technologies in Poland is extremely heated and highly politicized. Politicians on the right, Catholic clergy and some journalists use very radical language and criticize IVF as a technique that plays with the lives and deaths of thousands and thousands of children. The aim of (...)
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  39. Editorial 139 self-worth and the american dream. Or, how success becomes a failure experience.Biblical Hope & Success in Black Women - forthcoming - Humanitas.
     
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  40.  8
    Emancipation and the position of Albanian women in socialist Montenegro.Milan Scekic - 2021 - Journal for Cultural Research 25 (4):347-357.
    The thesis analyzes the position of Albanian women in the first decade of socialist rule in Montenegro, during which women became full members of society. The efforts of the communist authorities t...
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  41.  9
    Freedom of Religion, Institution of Conscientious Objection and Political Practice in Post-Communist Slovakia 1.Jana Plichtová & Magda Petrjánošová - 2008 - Human Affairs 18 (1):37-51.
    Freedom of Religion, Institution of Conscientious Objection and Political Practice in Post-Communist Slovakia1 The example of Slovakia is used to show how one of the post-socialist countries failed in fulfilling the demanding task of securing freedom of religious belief (including the right to conscientious objection) and, at the same time, securing all other human rights. An analysis of the methods used for changing the policies of pluralism and neutrality of the state into a policy of discrimination (e.g. concerning the registration (...)
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  42.  5
    Mulierem fortem quis inveniet: Polish Women Classicists under Communism.Elżbieta Olechowska - 2020 - Clotho 2 (2):41-56.
    While all chairs of classics after the war were entrusted to already well-established pre-war professors, female scholars, junior often only by rank, took care of the mind-boggling logistics of setting up the defunct departments and preparing them for the first cohort of students. It was an unusual group composed of various ages and levels of knowledge. Older ones saw their education put on hold during the war or attended underground university classes but did not obtain their degrees. Younger ones completed (...)
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  43.  49
    The Women's Wall in Kerala, India, and Brahmanical Patriarchy.Sonja Thomas - 2019 - Feminist Studies 45 (1):253-261.
    In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:Feminist Studies 45, no. 1. © 2019 by Feminist Studies, Inc. 253 Sonja Thomas The Women’s Wall in Kerala, India, and Brahmanical Patriarchy On January 1, 2019, a human chain of women, between three and five million strong and 385 miles long, gathered to protest the barring of menstruating women from entering Sabarimala Temple in Kerala, India. The so-called Women’s Wall received widespread news coverage; (...)
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  44.  7
    Peasant Women in Public Life and in Politics in the Rákosi Era: The First Woman főispán’s Career in Hungary.Ágota Lídia Ispán - 2017 - History of Communism in Europe 8:89-120.
    ‘Woman questions’ were emphasized in common speech during the time of the party-state in Hungary. In the 1950s this was symbolized by women tractor drivers, Stakhanovites in construction industry, or women who were present in public life and in politics. Mrs Mihály Berki, née Magdolna Szakács was one of the first emblematic female politicians who was appointed the first peasant woman főispán [honorary prefect] from a village at the end of 1948. The central elements of her life story (...)
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  45. Memorable Fiction. Evoking Emotions and Family Bonds in Post-Soviet Russian Women’s Writing.Marja Rytkӧnen - 2012 - Argument: Biannual Philosophical Journal 2 (1):59-74.
    This article deals with women-centred prose texts of the 1990s and 2000s in Russia written by women, and focuses especially on generation narratives. By this term the author means fictional texts that explore generational relations within families, from the perspective of repressed experiences, feelings and attitudes in the Soviet period. The selected texts are interpreted as narrating and conceptualizing the consequences of patriarchal ideology for relations between mothers and daughters and for reconstructing connections between Soviet and post-Soviet by (...)
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  46. Philosophy in Post-communist Europe.Dane R. Gordon - 1998 - Rodopi.
    This book explores the richness of contemporary philosophical reflection in Eastern and Central Europe. Philosophers from Poland, Russia, the Czech Republic, and the United States discuss the status of democracy, nationalism, language, economics, education, women, and philosophy itself in the aftermath of communism. Fresh ideas are combined with renewed traditions as poignant problems are confronted.
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  47.  4
    Resistance, Regulation and Rights: The Changing Status of Polish Women’s Migration and Work in the ‘New’ Europe.Angela Coyle - 2007 - European Journal of Women's Studies 14 (1):37-50.
    Faced with high levels of unemployment and discrimination in Poland, Polish women have made up a very large proportion of those leaving the former Communist states of central Europe, to work in EU member states. They have constituted a large undocumented migrant workforce in Europe, usually working as domestic workers and carers in the informal economy. Poland’s membership of the EU is starting to regulate Polish women’s work abroad and to increase their access to better paid and skilled (...)
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  48.  31
    Review of Engendering the Chinese Revolution: Radical Women, Communist Politics, and Mass Movement in the 1920s by Christina Kelley Gilmartin. [REVIEW]Huey-li Li - 1998 - Philosophy East and West 48 (3):517-519.
  49.  8
    Between the heroine mother and the absent woman: Motherhood and womanhood in the communist magazine Femeia.Denisa-Adriana Oprea - 2016 - European Journal of Women's Studies 23 (3):281-296.
    This article explores the representation of motherhood and womanhood in the Romanian communist magazine Femeia and the extent to which this publication was a mere vehicle of the official pronatalist policy of Ceausescu’s regime. Two phases have been identified, overlapping both the evolution of the magazine itself and the Party’s ideology. The author metaphorically designates them as follows: 1966–1971/1972, Almost the ‘Eternal Feminine’ and 1973–1978/1979, The ‘Steel Woman’ and the ‘Maternal Glory’. Drawing on discourse analysis and social history, the article (...)
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  50.  3
    Yulia Gradskova, The Women’s International Democratic Federation, the Global South and the Cold War: defending the rights of women of the “whole world”?Pascale Barthélémy - 2023 - Clio 57:335-338.
    La Fédération démocratique internationale des femmes (FDIF), créée en 1945 à Paris, a été l’une des plus importantes organisations féminines internationales durant la guerre froide. Tombée dans l’oubli, ignorée par l’histoire des femmes à l’Ouest comme à l’Est, elle fait l’objet de nouvelles recherches depuis une quinzaine d’années, en lien avec le dynamisme des travaux sur l’engagement « féministe » des États communistes. Les raisons idéologiques et intellectuelles de cet oubli ont été analy...
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