how about cyberfeminism? http://www.obn.org/inhalt_index.html
as ana says there are a lot of radical feminist activists doing amazing work on a range of contemporary issues around the world - women in black, RAWA (revolutionary women of afghanistan), the 13 indigenous grandmothers, & many many more. i am disappointed at how so many young western women think feminism is not relevant to them but in my experience that is not necessarily the case in countries where life is less comfortable. h : ) > >What is also interesting is that, my sisters have a much better life >than my mother did as in better working conditions etc, yet are less >likely to even think about Feminism and how what they have now was >thought for them originally. In a consumer culture such as what we are >all engulfed in there really needs to be a radical update of feminism, >and I don't mean the kind of lifestyle magazine'ish, media friendly term >of 'Post-Feminism', it needs to be as approachable as consumerism and >offer civil liberties that communicate across all classes and race. > >Any ideas? > >marc > -- ____________________________________________________________ helen varley jamieson: creative catalyst [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.creative-catalyst.com http://www.avatarbodycollision.org http://www.upstage.org.nz http://www.writerfind.com/hjamieson.htm ____________________________________________________________ _______________________________________________ NetBehaviour mailing list [email protected] http://www.netbehaviour.org/mailman/listinfo/netbehaviour
