Revisiting the rhetoric about and from within the women's liberation movement of the 1960s and 1970s, Victoria Hesford argues that contemporary accounts of the movement obscure its diversity.
The term women's liberation remains charged and divisive decades after it first entered political and cultural discourse around 1970. In Feeling Women's Liberation, Victoria Hesford mines the archive
Julia Kristeva and Elizabeth Grosz provide stimulating philosophical examinations of intellectual time in this collection of essays and case studies, noting the differences between feminist time and t