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Carol Hanisch

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Name
  
Carol Hanisch


Education
  
Drake University

Carol Hanisch wwwontheissuesmagazinecom2011winterissueimage

The personal is political: is identity politics eating itself?


Carol Hanisch is a radical feminist and was an important member of New York Radical Women and Redstockings. She is best known for popularizing the phrase "the personal is political" in a 1969 essay of the same name. She also conceived the 1968 Miss America protest and was one of the four women who hung a women's liberation banner over the balcony at the Miss America Pageant, disrupting the proceedings.

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Carol Hanisch the personal is political by carol hanisch corporeal femme

Hanisch was born and raised in Iowa, and worked as a wire services reporter in Des Moines before leaving to join the Delta Ministry in Mississippi in 1965, inspired by the Freedom Summer reports the year before. There, she met the co-founders of the Southern Conference Education Fund (SCEF), Anne Braden and husband Carl Braden, who hired her to run the SCEF NY office. By early 1968, Hanisch had secured the SCEF offices for the weekly meetings of the New York Radical Women, and it remained their base until the group dissolved in the early 70's.

Carol Hanisch Telltale Words Depoliticizing the Womens Liberation Movement

She co-founded and currently co-edits with Kathy Scarbrough Meeting Ground online, the third version of "Meeting Ground." The statement of purpose from 1977 describes itself as providing "an ongoing place to hammer out ideas about theory, strategy and tactics for the women’s liberation movement and for the general radical movement of working men and women."

Carol Hanisch A Revolutionary Moment Session 2 How to Defang a Movement Replacing

In 2013 Hanish, along with Scarbrough, Ti-Grace Atkinson and Kathie Sarachild initiated "Forbidden Discourse: The Silencing of Feminist Criticism of 'Gender'", which they described as an "open statement from 48 radical feminists from seven countries". In August 2014 Michelle Goldberg in The New Yorker described it as expressing their “alarm” at “threats and attacks, some of them physical, on individuals and organizations daring to challenge the currently fashionable concept of gender.”

Carol Hanisch Can You Identify These Important Feminist Icons

Despolitizando o movimento de libertacao das mulheres carol hanisch



Carol Hanisch BitterSweet Home Alabama The Feminist Wire

References

Carol Hanisch Wikipedia