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Playlist: To Listen

Compiled By: Kanna Hudson

Caption: PRX default Playlist image
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Womyn Am I

From Salt Institute for Documentary Studies | 06:33

Spend an evening with the 26-year old Feminist Spiritual Community in Portland, Maine.

Fscwomenincircle_small For over 26 years, the Feminist Spiritual Community has met every Monday night at the Quaker Meeting House in Portland, Maine.

No Turning Back

From Talking History | 29:00

Interview with Estelle Freedman, author of No Turning Back: The History of Feminism and the Future of Women. Commentary: Spinning the Casualties: the historical problems of reporting wartime casualty figures.

Default-piece-image-0 Will air the week beginning March 7th. Talking History marks Women’s History Month with an interview with Estelle Freedman. She discusses the gradual social change that continues to bring a realization that women are equal to men, with host Bryan Le Beau. Estelle Freedman is the Edgar E. Robinson Professor in U.S. History at Stanford University, and author of No Turning Back: The History of Feminism and the Future of Women. With the body count mounting in Iraq, Dennis Giangreco joins us to give an historical perspective on the problems of reporting wartime casualties. Giangreco is an editor of Military Review.

Gloria Steinem lecture Hour 1

From KUOW | Part of the Speaker's Forum series | 54:00

Hour 1 of two-hour lecture "If Women Mattered" by Gloria Steinem

Default-piece-image-0 Gloria Steinem?s name is synonymous with feminism and women empowerment. She founded Ms. Magazine more than twenty years ago and she?s still fighting for women?s rights and true equality of the sexes. Here, Gloria Steinem talks about what our nation and world would look like "If Women Mattered." Steinem spoke at Town Hall Seattle on March 8th, 2006. The University of Washington Graduate School sponsored the event.

The Oppressed Majority

From Voices of Our World | 27:59

Our guests are Mary Hudson and Jenny Holland, wife and daughter of Jack Holland, the author of ?Misogyny: The World?s Oldest Prejudice.?

Default-piece-image-1 Part One: The Oppressed Majority Ever since Eve bit into the apple, women have been exploited, demonized and discriminated against by men. Men who often have mothers, sisters, and daughters of their very own. Today on Voices of Our World we explore misogyny, its? origins, and how its? effects have altered the history of mankind. The battles fought by women to overcome male imposed, sexist institutional barriers in the workplace, the ballot box, and in their private lives are only the public manifestation of the personal, individual struggles that countless women have waged in the name of equality. Women often have their first encounters with misogyny as girls, frequently at the hands of loved ones who pass down sexist and antiquated beliefs onto their children. Our guests are Mary Hudson and Jenny Holland, wife and daughter of Jack Holland, the author of ?Misogyny: The World?s Oldest Prejudice.? Sadly, Jack Holland passed away before he could publish his book ?Misogyny: The World Oldest Prejudice?, but his wife and daughter, Mary Hudson and Jenny Holland, took it upon themselves to find a publisher as a labor of love for their late father and husband. OPTIONAL CUTAWAY CUE: ?You?re listening to Voices of Our World" at 14:00. Part Two: Battle of the Sexes Domestic violence, healthcare, education, family values, these are all issues we must confront together as a society, but they are intrinsically women?s issues as well. And as usual, whenever an issue concerns women, misogyny and its pernicious effects are a factor. Although women are the majority of the U.S. population, our laws, customs, and culture hardly reflect this fact. Just a quick glance at how women are often objectified as sex objects, portrayed as less intelligent, and dissuaded from speaking their mind in our society, and one can easily see that women aren?t the ones in control. Granted, many women have succeeded and have become powerful players in our society, but have women succeeded? What does the new face of feminism look like and what are its priorities? Men often ask ?what do women want?, and now it?s a woman?s job to tell them. We continue our discussion with Mary Hudson and Jenny Holland on Voices of Our World