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  1. Grace Atkinson (born November 9, 1938), better known as Ti-Grace Atkinson, is an American radical feminist activist, writer and philosopher. [2] [page needed] She was an early member of the National Organization for Women (NOW) and presided over the New York chapter in from 1967-68, though she quickly grew disillusioned with the group.

  2. ied Ti-Grace Atkinson, whose role in the early radical feminist movement has received less recognition than it should. I present parts of an interview. with Atkinson examining the impact of radical feminism, its ideologi. cal and political origins, key figures in the movement, her connection to key feminist figures, and lessons feminists have ...

  3. Ti-Grace Atkinson and the LegacyofRadical Feminism Breanne Fahs A peculiar problem arises when stories of social change—and the radi cal figures of those stories—persistently stay in the past tense. Much of what is known about the birth of radical feminism has been lost in archives, stunted by its out-of-print status or otherwise obscured ...

  4. Collection of papers of feminist, writer, and professor, Ti-Grace Atkinson, documenting her personal and professional life. Includes correspondence, writings, speeches, photographs, audiotapes, and more.

    • 3 James St, Cambridge, 02138, MA
    • 6.2B
  5. Sep 1, 2020 · As its subtitle indicates, Firebrand Feminisms focuses on four activists prominent in the radical feminist movement of the 1960s and early 1970s. In contrast to liberal feminists associated with the National Organization for Women and other groups that sought legal equality, radical feminists “wanted to dig deeper into the source of those inequities, including inequities that played out in ...

  6. Jul 23, 2019 · Ti-Grace similarly notes that it is often not possible to be a radical feminist academic and an activist, and many academics are out of touch with real-life struggles. The women also debate why radical feminism failed to move on further during the 1970s, and argue that women have internalised their own oppression rather than fighting back ...

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  8. Atkinson, Ti-Grace (1939–) American feminist. Born 1939 in US; University of Pennsylvania, BA (1964); attended Columbia University. Second-Wave feminist who abandoned liberal politics of National Organization for Women (NOW) in favor of more radical feminist agenda as laid out in her collection of essays Amazon Odyssey (1974); an early member of NOW, became president of NY chapter, but ...

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