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radical and feminist
A graduate of Mount Holyoke College ( then called Mount Holyoke Female Seminary ), she worked on a radical feminist publication named Alpha while living in Washington, D. C.
Other feminists have criticized these radical feminist views as being anti-men, though some radical feminists reject this portrayal of their views.
They argue, for example, that feminism often promotes misandry and the elevation of women's interests above men's, and criticize radical feminist positions as harmful to both men and women.
The most radical militant feminist activism was practiced by the Society of Revolutionary Republican Women, which was founded by Léon and her colleague, Claire Lacombe on 10 May 1793.
On November 9, 1882, Baum married Maud Gage, a daughter of Matilda Joslyn Gage, a famous women's suffrage and radical feminist activist.
Sally Roesch Wagner of The Matilda Joslyn Gage Foundation has published a pamphlet titled The Wonderful Mother of Oz describing how Matilda Gage's radical feminist politics were sympathetically channeled by Baum into his Oz books.
Academic Alice Echols, in her 1989 book Daring To Be Bad: Radical Feminism in America, 1967 – 1975, argued that radical feminist Valerie Solanas, best known for her attempted murder of Andy Warhol in 1968, displayed an extreme level of misandry compared to other radical feminists of the time in her tract, The SCUM Manifesto.
Drifting into radical groups she became a radical feminist and self avowed revolutionary.
The influence of radical feminism can be seen in the adoption of these issues by the National Organization for Women ( NOW ), a feminist group, that had previously been focused almost entirely on economic issues.
A majority of women of color did not participate a great deal in the radical feminist movement because it did not address many issues that were relevant to those from a working class background, of which they were a sizeable part.
In the 1960s, radical feminism emerged simultaneously within liberal feminist and working class feminist discussions, first in the United States, then in the United Kingdom and Australia.
In the United States, radical feminism developed as a response to some of the perceived failings of both New Left organizations such as the Students for a Democratic Society ( SDS ) and feminist organizations such as NOW.
Initially concentrated mainly in big cities like New York, Chicago, Boston, Washington, DC, and on the West Coast, radical feminist groups spread across the country rapidly from 1968 to 1972.
Within groups such as New York Radical Women ( 1967 – 1969 ), no relation to Radical Women, a present-day socialist feminist organization ), which Ellen Willis characterized as " the first women's liberation group in New York City ", a radical feminist ideology began to emerge that declared that " the personal is political " and " sisterhood is powerful ", formulations that arose from these consciousness-raising sessions.
" The feminist side of the split, which soon began referring to itself as " radical feminists ", soon constituted the basis of a new organization, Redstockings.
Redstockings and The Feminists were both radical feminist organizations, but held rather distinct views.
Because of their commitment to radical egalitarianism, most early radical feminist groups operated initially without any formal internal structure.
Ellen Willis hypothesized in 1984 that this was, at least in part, because " most black and working-class women could not accept the abstraction of feminist issues from race and class issues "; the resulting narrow demographic base, in turn, limited the validity of generalizations based on radical feminists ' personal experiences of gender relations.

radical and group
Lavoisier also contributed to early ideas on composition and chemical changes by stating the radical theory, believing that radicals, which function as a single group in a chemical process, combine with oxygen in reactions.
The American group Vanilla Fudge and British group Yes based their early careers on radical re-arrangements of contemporary hits.
For example, an " X " is used to indicate a variable group amongst a class of compounds ( though usually a halogen ), while " R " is used for a radical, meaning a compound structure such as a hydrocarbon chain.
This group was also younger, of more radical persuasion, and less-connected to a Mexican cultural heritage.
A radical group continued to fight the government, but signed its own peace treaty in 2001.
The most important figure in this group was Iliazd, whose radical typographical designs visually echo the publications of the Dadaists.
The so-called " Council of Three ," a group issuing manifestoes in LEF, a radical Russian newsmagazine, was established in 1922 ; the group's " three " were Vertov, his ( future ) wife and editor Elizaveta Svilova, and his brother and cinematographer Mikhail Kaufman.
* Environmental Life Force, a radical environmental group founded in the United States in 1977
The stereotype emerged early on of Scottish colliers as brutish, non-religious and socially isolated serfs ; that was an exaggeration, for their life style resembled the miners everywhere, with a strong emphasis on masculinity, equalitarianism, group solidarity, and support for radical labour movements.
The Legislative Assembly consisted of about 165 Feuillants ( constitutional monarchists ) on the right, about 330 Girondists ( liberal republicans ) in the center, a vocal group of Jacobins ( radical revolutionaries ) on the left, and about 250 deputies unaffiliated with any of those factions.
A third and more radical group founded the Russian Social Democratic Labour Party or RSDLP in 1898 ; this party was the primary exponent of Marxism in Russia.
The neutral form of the hydroxyl group is a hydroxyl radical.
Kevin Carson has praised Lum's fusion of individualist laissez-faire economics with radical labor activism as " creative " and described him as " more significant than any in the Boston group ".
" He became involved with a group of radical thinkers known as the Young Hegelians, who gathered around Ludwig Feuerbach and Bruno Bauer.
Cornelius Castoriadis, libertarian socialist theoristSocialisme ou Barbarie ( Socialism or Barbarism ) was a French-based radical libertarian socialist group of the post-World War II period ( the name comes from a phrase Friedrich Engels used, and was cited by Rosa Luxemburg in a 1916 essay, ' The Junius Pamphlet ').
The methyl group can be found in three forms: anion, cation and radical.
* 1849 – A Russian court sentences Fyodor Dostoevsky to death for anti-government activities linked to a radical intellectual group ; his sentence is later commuted to hard labor.
A group of radical socialist Australians in the 1890s voluntarily went to create a failed master-planned community, known as Nueva ( New ) Australia ; and Elisabeth Nietzsche, a German racial ideologist and sister of philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche came to Paraguay in her attempt to build a colony, Nueva Germania ( Neues Deutschland ) devoted to a hypothetical pure white " Nordic " society in the 1890s.
More recently, advocates for radical reform in justice systems have called for a public policy adoption of non-punitive, non-violent Restorative Justice methods, and many of those studying the success of these methods, including a United Nations working group on Restorative Justice, have attempted to re-define justice in terms related to peace.
In older literature, a polyatomic ion is also referred to as a radical, and less commonly, as a radical group.
" In 1971 she attached herself to the radical ex-convict group United Prisoners Union and dropped out of school.
After a day of angry protests by exiled Iranian radical marxists, a group widely supported by German students, the Shah visited the Berlin Opera, where a crowd of German student protesters gathered.

radical and Cell
In No More Fun and Games, the organization's radical feminist periodical, Cell Members Roxanne Dunbar and Lisa Leghorn advised women to " separate from men who are not consciously working for female liberation ", but advised periods of celibacy, rather than lesbian relationships, which they considered to be " nothing more than a personal solution.
The film, set in contemporary Paris and taking place in a small apartment, is structured as a series of personal and ideological dialogues dramatizing the interactions of five French university students — three young men and two young women — belonging to a radical Maoist group called the " Aden Arabie Cell " ( named for the novel, Aden, Arabie, by Paul Nizan ).
She was also very active in the women's rights movement, and from 1968 – 1970 was a leading figure, along with Maureen Maynes, Dana Densmore and Betsy Warrior, in the radical feminist group, Cell 16.

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