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Feminist and science
Feminist science fiction is a sub-genre of science fiction which tends to deal with women's roles in society.
Feminist science fiction poses questions about social issues such as how society constructs gender roles, the role reproduction plays in defining gender and the unequal political and personal power of men and women.
Feminist science fiction is sometimes taught at the university level to explore the role of social constructs in understanding gender.
Feminist science fiction is evidenced in the globally popular mediums of comic books, manga, and graphic novels.
Feminist science fiction provides a means to challenge the norms of society and suggest new standards for how societies view gender.
* Feminist science fiction poses questions about social issues such as how society constructs gender roles, the role reproduction plays in defining gender and the unequal political and personal power of men and women.
* Feminist science fiction
" Feminist economists call attention to the value judgements in all aspects economics and criticize its depiction an objective science.
Feminist economists, argue on the contrary that a mathematical conception of economics limited to scarce resources is a holdover from the early years of science and Cartesian philosophy, and limits economic analysis.
Feminist critiques of economics include that " economics, like any science, is socially constructed.
* Feminist science fiction
Category: Feminist science fiction novels
" Feminist academic and AIDS video producer Alexandra Juhasz puts forth the film as " an effective critique of the silly sensationalism used in much reportage of AIDS science fights melodrama and tabloid journalism -- with melodrama and tabloid journalism.
* Feminist science fiction
Category: Feminist science fiction
Category: Feminist science fiction novels
Category: Feminist science fiction
* Feminist science fiction
Category: Feminist science fiction novels
Category: Feminist science fiction novels
Category: Feminist science fiction novels
Category: Feminist science fiction novels
Category: Feminist science fiction

Feminist and fiction
Category: Feminist fiction
Category: Feminist fiction
Category: Feminist fiction
Category: Feminist science fiction novels

Feminist and issue
" The July 2002 issue of the Feminist Economics journal was dedicated to issues of " gender, color, caste and class.
In the 1994 issue of Feminist Review, Professor Amalia Ziv of Ben-Gurion University described the trilogy as " definitely more of a comedy " when compared to darker BDSM novels such as Story of O, and commented that " like all comedies, it ends in marriage ".
Guest-edited " Queer Theory " issue of Differences: A Journal of Feminist Cultural Studies ( 1990 )
Feminist writers such as Robin Lakoff ( 1975 ) in her book " Language and Woman's Place " notably raised the issue of the ways in which " lady " is not used as the counterpart of " gentleman ".
In the Spring 2002 issue commemorating the magazine's 30th year, Gloria Steinem and Feminist Majority president Eleanor Smeal noted the magazine's increased ability to " share research and resources, expand investigative journalism, and bring its readers the personal experience that has always been the source of the women's health movement.

Feminist and magazine
In a 2006 interview titled " Pop Goes the Feminist ," Bitch magazine co-founder Andi Zeisler explained the naming of the magazine:
Since 2001, the magazine has been published by the Feminist Majority Foundation, based in Los Angeles and Arlington, Virginia.
With Liberty Media facing bankruptcy in November 2001, the Feminist Majority Foundation purchased the magazine, dismissed Gillespie and staff, and moved editorial headquarters from New York to Los Angeles.
They included Jewish Orthodox Feminist Alliance founder Blu Greenberg, who told a press conference at the offices of the American Jewish Congress that the leaders of the magazine ' have aligned themselves with those on the political far left whose agenda is to totally de-legitimate Israel on the stage of world opinion.
She continued to lead the Egyptian Feminist Union until her death, publishing the feminist magazine l ' Egyptienne ( and el-Masreyya ), and representing Egypt at women's congresses in Graz, Paris, Amsterdam, Berlin, Marseilles, Istanbul, Brussels, Budapest, Copenhagen, Interlaken, and Geneva.
In the 1970s, lesbians and feminists created a network of publications, presses, magazines, and periodicals designated " for women only " and " for lesbians only ", a common sight in the 1970s through the 1990s, ( see List of lesbian periodicals ) including the London lesbian magazine Gossip: a journal of lesbian feminist ethics, Lesbian Feminist Circle, a lesbian only journal collectively produced in Wellington, New Zealand, the Australian periodical Sage: the separatist age Canada's Amazones d ' Hier, Lesbiennes d ' Aujourd ' hui, produced for lesbians only in Montreal, Quebec, and the Killer Dyke a magazine by the " Flippies " ( Feminist Lesbian Intergalactic Party ), based in Chicago.
Feminist magazine director Lisa Jervis places radical cheerleading within a tradition of playful feminist comment on popular culture.
Since 2001, Smeal is also the publisher of Ms. magazine which is owned and published by the Feminist Majority Foundation.

Feminist and Future
" Determinate Politics of Indeterminacy: Reading Joanna Russ's Recent Work in Light of Her Early Short Fiction " in Future Females, the Next Generation: New Voices and Velocities in Feminist Science Fiction Criticism.
* The Feminist Future: Guerrilla Girls a video from a talk presented at the Museum of Modern Art.
* June Deery ( 2000 ) " The Biopolitics of Cyberspace: Piercy Hacks Gibson " pp. 87 – 108 IN: Marleen S. Barr, editor, Future Females, The Next Generation: New Voices and Velocities in Feminist Science Fiction Criticism.
Realizing the Archaic Future: A Radical Elemental Feminist Manifesto.
In, Pamela L. Geller, Miranda K. Stockett, Feminist Anthropology: Past, Present, and Future, pp 89 – 102.

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