This explication of the major contributions to feminist theory in
the late Twentieth Century covers initial articulations of the
'Woman' Problem by Virginia Woolf; and Simone de Beauvoir, Radical
Feminism (Kate Millett; Shulamith Firestone; Radicalesbians; Mary
Daly), Black Feminism (Audre Lorde; Alice Walker; Patricia Hill
Collins), French Feminism (Luce Irigaray; Helene Cixous; Monique
Wittig; Julia Kristeva), Materialist Feminism (Gayle Rubin; Gayatri
Chakravorty Spivak), and Queer Theory (Adrienne Rich; Judith
Butler; Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick; Wayne Koestenbaum). Jennifer A. Rich
is an Associate Professor at Hofstra Uiversity where she offers
course in the rhetoric of feminism, theories and history of
rhetoric and contemporary understandings of rhetoric. She has
published widely in the areas of writing studies, rhetoric, film
studies, and Shakespeare, and is the author of An Introduction to
Critical Theory in the Humanities Insights series.
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