
Food
In each Issue
Letters & Comments
Love It/Shove It
• foodstuff from the Cusps: A Q&A with Kay Ulanday Barrett | Amelia Ayrelan Iuvino
The complain List
On the Record—Kathleen Hanna talks in regards to the grrrl she was once and the lady she is now | Sarah Mirk
On the Counter—The slow-roasted sexism of forte espresso | Lisa Knisely
On the Table—Did women's lib quite kill the selfmade meal? | Sarah-Jane Stratford
Features
Craving the Other—One woman's pork with cultural appropriation. | Soleil Ho
Growing Pains: Why exertions is the genuine foodstuff stream we should always be being attentive. | s.e. smith
Feast Your Eyes—Nine artists encouraged by means of nutrients. | Various
Clip Artists—Women, paintings, and severe couponing. | Adrienne Rose Johnson
Redefined Palate—Sistah Vegan Project's Breeze Harper dishes on conscious consuming. | Vera Chang
Eating Out—Real speak with Meaty's Samantha Irby. | J.J. Keith
The Cellophane Ceiling—The gender dynamics of ability and serving on foodstuff television. | Kate Forbes
And She Was—The tale of the best woman staff you've by no means heard of. | Lindsay Zoladz
The again Page
Adventures in Feministory Comics: Queen Ka'ahumanu Emi Gennis
Read Online or Download Bitch, Issue 61: Food (Winter 2014) PDF
Best feminism books
Nicole Brossard's lucid, subversive and leading edge paintings on language has motivated a whole new release of readers and writers. yet 3 of her seminal works of postmodernism and feminism were misplaced to us for years. The Blue Books brings them back.
A ebook: a singular a few novel; 5 characters in "search of a story, a story looking for an writer. " Brossard's first novel, and a key paintings in Canadian postmodernism. flip of a Pang (Sold-out in French): Quebec's 1943 Conscription difficulty and the 1970 conflict Measures Act weave jointly to shape the feel of a woman's lifestyles. French Kiss: a party of the strength of ladies and language within the face of the male specialists of Montreal politics and the actual authority of the broadcast (and certain) word.
The Blue Books collects those 3 long-out-of-print, groundbreaking Brossard titles, of their unique trainer apartment Press English translations (A ebook via Larry Shouldice, flip of a Pang and French Kiss by way of the acclaimed Patricia Claxton). Don't be blue: those Brossard classics are back!
Nancy Friday's out of the ordinary bestsellers My mystery backyard and Forbidden plants broke new floor, revealing for the 1st time the complexity of women's mystery sexual fantasies. In girls on best, she returns to the topic that made her well-known, reading the erotic fable lives of a couple of hundred and fifty sleek ladies.
Witches, Midwives, and Nurses: A History of Women Healers (2nd Edition) (Contemporary Classics)
As we watch one other agonizing try to shift the way forward for future health care within the usa, we're reminded of the sturdiness of this quandary, and the way firmly entrenched we're in a method that doesn't work.
Witches, Midwives, and Nurses, first released via The Feminist Press in 1973, is a vital booklet concerning the corruption of the scientific institution and its ancient roots in witch hunters. during this re-creation, Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English have written a wholly new bankruptcy that delves into the present fascination with and controversies approximately witches, exposing our fears and fantasies. They construct on their vintage exposé at the demonization of ladies healers and the political and monetary monopolization of medication. This speedy background brings us updated, exploring today's altering attitudes towards childbirth, replacement drugs, and modern day witches.
Barbara Ehrenreich is writer of the hot York instances bestsellers Nickel and Dimed and Bait and turn, and, so much lately, This Land is Their Land.
Deirdre English, the previous editor of mom Jones, is a professor within the Graduate tuition of Journalism on the collage of California, Berkeley.
First booklet: 1973
Second variation e-book: 2010
E-publication 2010
EPUB ISBN: 9781558616905
Elizabeth Gurley Flynn: Modern American Revolutionary (Lives of American Women)
In 1906, fifteen-year outdated Elizabeth Gurley Flynn fastened a soapbox in instances sq. to denounce capitalism and proclaim a brand new period for women’s freedom. speedy famous as an excellent public speaker and ambitious organizer, she committed her lifestyles to making a socialist the USA, “free from poverty, exploitation, greed and injustice.
- Jung, Irigaray, Individuation: Philosophy, Analytical Psychology, and the Question of the Feminine
- We Were Feminists Once: From Riot Grrrl to CoverGirl®, the Buying and Selling of a Political Movement
- Politicization of Sexual Violence: From Abolitionism to Peacekeeping (Gender in a Global/Local World)
- Marxism, Liberalism, And Feminism (Leftist Legal Thought)
Additional resources for Bitch, Issue 61: Food (Winter 2014)
Sample text
When I entered my first year of college in Iowa, a strange pattern began to emerge as I got to know my classmates. ” they’d ask. ” The same people who would have made fun of me for bringing a stinky rice-noodle salad to school 10 years ago Your purchase of this digital edition makes it possible for us to thrive. talked to me as if I were the gatekeeper to some hidden temple that they had discovered on their own. Pho seemed like a shortcut for them, a way that they could tell me that they knew about my culture and our soupy ways without me having to tell them.
Andi zeisler Your purchase of this digital edition makes it possible for us to thrive. 61 bitch | 39 Bitch Media is a non-profit, independent media organization. Craving th� Other One Woman’s Beef with Cultural Appropriation and cuisine by Soleil Ho | illustrations by Ana Benaroya F or a long time, Vietnamese food made me uncomfortable. It was brothy, weirdly fishy, and full of the gross animal parts that other people didn’t seem to want. It was too complicated. I wanted the straightforward, prefabricated snacks that I saw on television: Bagel Bites, Pop-Tarts, chicken nuggets.
Additionally, women across the world still perform twice as much unpaid work as their husbands. Extreme couponers amplify the common feminist argument about the economic value of unpaid housework. a. 50 per hour. Accounting for the increased costs of child care, commuting, and grocery bills, among other expenses, McCoy estimates that she saves $18,120 annually by not working. As work, couponing could be evaluated in the same terms as wage labor: saved money as “earned,” and real economic benefit put toward a family’s expenses.