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513 results:
52. Violence Against Women Movement, Feminist Activism, Feminists in 1970s, Women's Liberation  
… …n building has always been important to the feminist movement. There was much… …  
54. Violence Against Women Movement, Feminist Activism, Feminists in 1970s, Women's Liberation  
… … / Try to imagine a multidimensional map of feminist activism in the 1970s and beyond.… …  
56. Phyllis Schlafly, National Women’s Conference 1977, Feminists and the ERA, Equal Rights Amendment  
… … Not all women jumped on the feminist bandwagon in the 1970s. While support for the… …  
57. Phyllis Schlafly, National Women’s Conference 1977, Feminists and the ERA, Equal Rights Amendment  
… … / After the ERA was defeated in 1982, feminists debated whether it had been a good… …  
58. United Nations Conference on Women, UN Women's Conference, Global Violence Against Women  
… … of the 1990s saw a surge in global feminist activism, much of it centered on… …  
59. United Nations Conference on Women, UN Women's Conference, Global Violence Against Women  
… … feminism. In the 1980s, American feminists, stymied at home by the rise of… …  
60. United Nations Conference on Women, UN Women's Conference, Global Violence Against Women  
… … countries. Additionally, feminists in the Global North often zero… …  
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1971 The Click! Moment

The idea of the “Click! moment” was coined by Jane O’Reilly. “The women in the group looked at her, looked at each other, and ... click! A moment of truth. The shock of recognition. Instant sisterhood... Those clicks are coming faster and faster. They were nearly audible last summer, which was a very angry summer for American women. Not redneck-angry from screaming because we are so frustrated and unfulfilled-angry, but clicking-things-into-place-angry, because we have suddenly and shockingly perceived the basic disorder in what has been believed to be the natural order of things.” Article, “The Housewife's Moment of Truth,” published in the first issue of Ms. Magazine and in New York Magazine. Republished in The Girl I Left Behind, by Jane O'Reilly (Macmillan, 1980). Jane O'Reilly papers, Schlesinger Library.