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The Feminist Bookstore Movement
Hogan Kristen

The Feminist Bookstore Movement

Lesbian Antiracism And Feminist Accountability

Duke University Press Books
9780822361299
| paperback
328 pages | 0.7 x 9 inch | en_US
Dewey 381/.4500208209
LC Classification HQ75.6.U5 .H64 2016
LC Control No. 2015033350

Genre

  • History

Subject

  • Anti-racism - History - United States
  • Feminist Literature - History - United States
  • Feminist Movement
  • Lesbian Business Enterprises
  • Lesbian Communities
  • Lesbian Feminism - History - United States
  • Lesbian Publishing
  • Lesbian/Feminist Publishing-Bookselling
  • Women in Print
  • Women's Movement
  • Women's Studies

Plot

From the 1970s through the 1990s more than one hundred feminist bookstores built a transnational network that helped shape some of feminism's most complex conversations. Kristen Hogan traces the feminist bookstore movement's rise and eventual fall, restoring its radical work to public feminist memory. The bookwomen at the heart of this story—mostly lesbians and including women of color—measured their success not by profit, but by developing theories and practices of lesbian antiracism and feminist accountability. At bookstores like BookWoman in Austin, the Toronto Women’s Bookstore, and Old Wives’ Tales in San Francisco, and in the essential Feminist Bookstore News, bookwomen changed people’s lives and the world. In retelling their stories, Hogan not only shares the movement's tools with contemporary queer antiracist feminist activists and theorists, she gives us a vocabulary, strategy, and legacy for thinking through today's feminisms.