“Present-day women's lib … is repudiation of the obligation to follow a certain pattern if you are a woman. It is much more fundamental than suffragism. And, on the whole, I am with it.”
Interview with The Sunday Telegraph, quoted in the Eugene Register-Guard (27 December 1972) https://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=1310&dat=19721227&id=OalVAAAAIBAJ&sjid=9-ADAAAAIBAJ&pg=6123,7185434&hl=en
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Rebecca West38
British feminist and author 1892–1983Related quotes
Mary Crow Dog book Lakota Woman
Source: Lakota Woman (1990), p. 244
Frederick Douglass (1818–1895) American social reformer, orator, writer and statesman
1860s, What the Black Man Wants (1865)
Mary Wollstonecraft book Thoughts on the Education of Daughters
Thoughts on the Education of Daughters (1787), "Matrimony", p. 100
Context: Nothing, I am sure, calls forth the faculties so much as the being obliged to struggle with the world; and this is not a woman's province in a married state. Her sphere of action is not large, and if she is not taught to look into her own heart, how trivial are her occupations and pursuits! What little arts engross and narrow her mind!
Marianne von Werefkin (1860–1938) expressionist painter
written in her Journal, 1905
Quote of Werefkin's Journal, 1905; in Briefe an einen Unbekannten, ed. Clemens Weiler, Cologne: Verlag M. DuMont, 1960, p. 50
1895 - 1905
Mark Steyn (1959) Canadian writer
Battered Westerner Syndrome inflicted by myopic Muslim defenders (2002)
Jay Lemke (1946) American academic
Source: Textual politics: Discourse and social dynamics, 1995, p. 156
“I am sick of women who love one. Women who hate one are much more interesting.”
Oscar Wilde (1854–1900) Irish writer and poet