Browse the American Women collection
Title | Description | Keywords | Genre | PRA Archive # | StoreItem |
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San Francisco women's liberation media project (Episode 1) |
Collage of music and sound, prepared by the Women's Liberation Media Project, designed to present some news about, and viewpoints of, the women's liberation movement. The program was previously broadcast over KSAN-FM. |
Women's liberation media project., Women's rights, Feminism, American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 | American Women -- Radical Feminism, American Women -- Radio | BC0098 | Women's liberation media project. (CD) |
San Francisco women's liberation media project (Episode 2) |
The second collage of music and words produced by the San Francisco Women's Liberation Media Project for KPFA, to further the struggle for women's liberation. Includes pronouncements about the women's liberation movement: women and housework, women and bodily autonomy, the structure of women's liberation groups and others. Also includes brief news segments on: women protesting the San Francisco Chronicle; efforts by women to free Black Panther Joan Bird from prison; a women's protest at a Boston consulting firm; the formation of Trapped Housewives Anonymous in San Diego; welfare mothers protesting in Alameda County; Washington, D.C.'s General Hospital refusing to provide abortions for women; and others. Pre-recorded music woven between each segment. None of the speakers are introduced. |
Feminist movement, Women's liberation media project., American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 | American Women -- Radical Feminism, American Women -- Radio | BC0693 | |
San Francisco women's liberation media project (Episode 3) |
The third collage, produced by the San Francisco Women's Liberation Media Project, to further the struggle for women's liberation. Includes brief segments concerning the treatment of Black Panther Peggy Hudgins in jail; the Catholic Church's filling of convents with peasant girls from poor countries; the mistreatment of striking women employees at Safeway during the grape boycott; gender discrimination at Newsweek; reports on war atrocities in Vietnam, including rape and murder of women; the disruption of a wedding on the UC Berkeley campus by the Contra Costa Anti-Rape Squad; women protesting the sale of sexist banners in Williamstown, MA; the formation of women's liberation groups in India and China; and satirical takes on advertising directed towards women. Pre-recorded music woven between each segment. None of the speakers are introduced. |
San Francisco women's liberation media workshop., Women's liberation media project., American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 | American Women -- Radical Feminism, American Women -- Radio | BC0707 | |
San Francisco Women's Music Festival, 1974 |
Recordings from the 1974 San Francisco Women's Music Festival, recorded at the First Unitarian Church in January 1974. Contents: Reel A: A brief rap by one of the festival's organizers (from San Francisco Women's Center) to be used as an introduction to the music tape. Reel B: Performances from the concert: Susie and Selby perform Bill Monroe's "Uncle Pen"; Faith Petric plays "Bread & Roses" and Jean Ritchie's "West Virginia Mining Disaster"; Debbie Spitz performs a flute solo; Arlene Brown performs on the piano; Bonnie Bluhm performs two songs, the second titled "Thank You"; Holly Tannen performs Blind Alfred Reed's "Why Do You Bob Your Hair Girls?" and the ballad "Fair Flower of Northumberland"; Malvina Reynolds performs "There's a Bottom Below," "Rosie Jane," "On the Rim of the World," and "We Don't Need the Men." Reels C, D and E are not currently held by the Archives. Reel F: Susanne Schonking[sp?] performs, Linda Hirschhorn and Debbie Spitz perform together; Betty Kaplowitz performs "Rainbow Song", Carole King's "Will You Still Love Me Tomorrow," and "Look in My Eyes, Can You Even See Them"; Rosalie Sorrels performs (recording starts mid-set): "Mehitabel's Theme," "Apple of My Eye," "Song for My Birthday," and "One Day at a Time." |
American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Women's music, Women's music festivals, Unlearning to Not Speak collective., Petric, Faith., Reynolds, Malvina., Tannen, Holly., Sorrels, Rosalie. | American Women -- Music and musicians | AZ1665 | |
Sandy Silver speaks out against the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant |
A member of Mothers for Peace, the organization which brought a lawsuit against the Diablo Canyon Nuclear Power Plant, delivers an unsolicited address from the floor of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission Licensing Board hearing in San Luis Obispo in Summer 1981. Contains sensitive language. Tape label: "According to Mothers for Peace, the legal intervenors in the Diablo Canyon case, local opposition to the plant has sky-rocketed over the last 2 months, as the licensing date drew near and as the people of San Luis began to realize that Federal authorities were not going to keep the plant from opening. For many San Luis residents, that realization came during the most recent set of license hearings held in their town." |
Silver, Sandy., Nuclear power plants., Antinuclear movement, U.S. Nuclear Regulatory Commission, American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Diablo Canyon Nuclear Powerplant (Calif.) | American Women -- Peace and Antinuclear activism | AZ0706 | |
Santa Maria de Iquique / produced by Elizabeth Farnsworth. |
Historical documentary about the 1907 massacre of 3,600 men, women, and children during a labor dispute in the nitrate-mining town of Iquique, Chile. Presented by Elizabeth Farnsworth, of the North American Congress on Latin America. Contains a popular cantata, titled "Santa Maria de Iquique," which describes the massacre and the strikes that led to it, composed by songwriter and philosopher Luis Advis (1935 - 2004) and recorded in Chile by Quilapayun. |
Farnsworth, Elizabeth., Working classes -- Chile., Labor unions -- Chile., Advis, Luis, Quilapayún (Musical group), American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 | American Women -- Work and unions, American Women -- International women | BC0799 | |
Sappho / read by Beryl Grafton |
Sappho. The lyrics of the Greek poetess born between 615-612 BC are read by Beryl Grafton, accompanied by Daniel Moore on the harp. |
Poetry, Ancient., Women poets, Sappho, American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Poetry reading | American Women -- Poetry | BB2018 | |
Sappho was a right-on woman. |
A discussion about lesbians and lesbianism in America: their oppression and liberation, their role in the women's movement, the gay movement and other movements seeking to bring about social change. The program's title comes from a recently-published book of the same name by Sidney Abbott (1937 - 2015) and Barbara J. Love (1937 - ). The discussants are Lynda Koolish, Alice Molloy, Ellen DuBrowin, and Sidney Abbott. Moderator and host is Laurie Simms. |
Sappho, Lesbianism, Abbott, Sidney., Lesbians -- United States -- Political activity, American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 | American Women -- Lesbians | BC0954 | |
Sentencing of the Berkeley free speech movement defendants |
Speeches and interviews given by Free Speech Movement defendants as they are sentenced, enter, or are released from the Santa Rita detention center for their activities three years prior. Narrator Elsa Knight Thompson explains how on June 12, 1967 the United States Supreme Court refused to hear the Free Speech Movement case, she reads the appeal brief, and speaks of the details of the sentencing of the participants of the Sit-In at Sproul Hall in December 1964. On June 21, 1967 they began serving their sentences for trespassing and refusal to disperse during the sit-in. In 1967 a rally was held to honor those now being sentenced and serving. At the rally, Anita Levine speaks about her experience at Santa Rita Jail. She describes her day-to-day life in jail. English Professor Thomas Parkinson reads from an FSM student's letter from Santa Rita. Roberta Alexander, a FSM defendant and a student, speaks about her recent experience in Spain and being expelled from the country and forced to serve this sentence. Several other speakers address the crowd about the police brutality and their thoughts on FSM, including Hal Draper, Chairman of the Independent Socialist Club and editor of the journal New Politics, John Searle, Professor of Philosophy, FSM leader Bettina Aptheker, who served her sentence while 7 months pregnant, and Mario Savio is interviewed. Produced by the News and Public Affairs Department at KPFA. |
American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Free Speech Movement (Berkeley, Calif.), Thompson, Elsa Knight, Savio, Mario, Parkinson, Thomas Francis, 1920-, Aptheker, Bettina, Draper, Hal., Levine, Anita, Alexander, Roberta., Searle, John R. | American Women -- Activists | BB1303 | Sentencing of the Berkeley free speech movement defendants (CD) |
Setting the stage, 1949 : enter the Cold War |
The mood of the Cold War era is explored in interviews with Jessica Mitford, Helga Lohr-Bailey, and Billy Allan, three political activists of the forties and fifties. Produced as part of the KPFA thirtieth anniversary retrospective programming group. Interviews conducted by Helen Mickiewicz, Laurie Garrett, and Paul Allen. Produced by Helen Mickiewicz. |
Mitford, Jessica, 1917-1996, Allan, Billy., Lohr Bailey, Helga, World politics -- 1945-, United States -- History., McCarthyism., KPFA thirty year retrospective, American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 | American Women -- Politicians and politics | AZ0232 | Setting the stage, 1949 : enter the Cold War |