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Selected Bibliography on Feminism, Art and Politics
This bibliography is in no way compre-
hensive, nor does it include the many
books and publications already well
known to feminists. Instead, we have tried
to present lesser-known articles and pamph-
lets along with works that we feel are
essential to an understanding of the rela-
tionship of feminism, art and politics.
Anonymous Was A Woman, Feminist Art
Program, California Institute of the Arts
(Valencia, Ca., 1975).
Art: A Woman’s Sensibility, Feminist Art
Program, California Institute of the Arts
(Valencia, Ca., 1974).
Baxandall, Lee, Ed., Radical Perspectives
in the Arts, Pelican (Baltimore, 1972).
Beauvoir, Simone de, “Simone de Beauvoir
et la Lutte de Femmes,” special issue of
D’Arc, no. 61,1975.
Bebel, August, Woman Under Socialism,
Schocken Books (New York, 1971).
Berger, John, Ways of Seeing, Viking Press
(New York, 1972).
Blumenfeld, Gina, “What Is to Be Undone
in the Women’s Movement,” Liberation,
(Feb., 1975).
Braderman, Joan, “Report: The First Festi-
val of Women’s Films,” Artforum (Sept.,
1972).
Bunch, Charlotte and Myron, Nancy, ed.,
Class and Feminism: A Collection of Essays
from The Furies, Diana Press (Baltimore,
1974).
Chicago, Judy, Through the Flower: My
Struggle as a Woman Artist, Doubleday
(Garden City, N.J., 1975).
Cockcroft, Eva, “Abstract Expressionism—
Weapon of the Cold War,” Artforum
(vol.12, no. 10, June, 1974).
Davis, Angela, ed., If They Come in the
Morning: Voices of the Resistance, New
American Library (New York, 1971); includes
writings by Bettina Aptheker, Erika Huggins,
Margaret Burnham, Fania Davis, and others.
Deming, Barbara, “Two Perspectives on
Women'’s Struggle,” Liberation (June, 1973).
Deren, Maya, “Writings on Film by Maya
Deren,” Film Culture (no. 39, Winter, 1965).
Duncan, Carol, “Male Domination and
Virility in 20th Century Art,”" Artforum,
(Dec., 1973).
Duncan, Carol, “When Greatness is a Box
of Wheaties,”” Artforum (Oct., 1976).
Eber, Irene, “Images of Women in Recent
Chinese Fiction: Do Women Hold Up Half
the Sky?,” Signs (Autumn, 1976).
Figes, Eva, Patriarchal Attitudes: The Case
for Women in Revolt, Fawcett (Greenwich,
Conn., 1971).
Gluck, Sherna, ed., From Parlor to Prison,
Vintage (New York, 1976).
Guettel, Charnie, Marxism and Feminism,
Women’s Educational Press (Ontario,
Canada, 1974).
Interviews With Women in the Arts (part
1 and 2), Women in the Arts Publication,
The School of Visual Arts (New York,
1975, 1976).
Jenness, Linda, ed., Feminism and Social-
ism, Pathfinder Press (New York, 1972).
Kearns, Martha, Kathe Kollwitz: Woman
and Artist, The Feminist Press (Old West-
bury, 1976).
Kollontai, Alexandra, The Autobiography
of a Sexually Emancipated Communist
Woman, Schocken Books (New York, 1975).
Kozloff, Max, ““American Painting During
the Cold War,” Artforum (May 1973).
Larguia, lIsabel, and Dumoulin, John,
“Towards a Science of ‘Women’s Libera-
tion’,” NACLA Newsletter (no. 10, 1972).
Lasson, Kenneth, The Workers, Bantam
Books (New York, 1972); especially “The
Maid,” “The Waitress,” and “The Telephone
Operator.”
Lippard, Lucy R., From the Center: Feminist
Essays on Women’s Art, Dutton (New York,
1976).
Looker, Robert, ed., Rosa Luxemburg,
Selected Political Writings, Grove Press,
Inc. (New York, 1974).
Lopate, Carol, “Women and Pay for House-
work,” Liberation (May-June, 1974).
Mitchell, Juliet, Psychoanalysis and Fem-
inism, Pantheon (New York, 1974).
Mitchell, Juliet, “Women and Equality,”
Partisan Review (Summer, 1975).
Mitchell, Juliet, Woman’s Estate, Vintage
(New York, 1971).
“More on Women’s Art: An Exchange,”
Diane Burko, Mary Beth Edelson, Harmony
Hammond, Miriam Schapiro, Benson
Woodroofe, Saribenne Stone, and Dona
Nelson, Art in America (Nov.-Dec. 1976).
Women'’s responses and Lawrence Allo-
way’s reply to his article “Women’s Art
in the 1970’s,” Art in America (May-June,
1976).
Nochlin, Linda, “Why Are There No Great
Women Artists?,”” Art News (Jan. 1971).
O’Neill, William L. ed., Women at Work,
Quadrangle (New York, 1972); comprised
of “The Long Day” by Dorothy Richardson
and “Inside the New York Telephone
Company” by Elinor Langer.
Raven, Arlene, “Women’s Art: The Develop-
ment of a Theoretical Perspective,”
Womanspace Journal (no.1,1973).
Redstockings, ed., Feminist Revolution
(New York, 1975).
Rich, Adrienne, “The Kingdom of the
Fathers,” Partisan Review (vol. 43, no. 1,
1976).
Rowbotham, Sheila, Hidden From History,
Random House (New York, 1974).
Rowbotham, Sheila, Woman’s Conscious-
ness, Man’s World, Penguin (Baltimore,
1973).
Rowbotham, Sheila, Women, Resistance,
and Revolution, Vintage Books (New York,
1974); extensive bibliography.
Sontag, Susan, “The Third World of
Women,” Partisan Review (vol. 40, no. 2,
1973).
Sontag, Susan, “Women, the Arts, and the
Politics of Culture: An Interview with
Susan Sontag,” by Robert Bayers and
Maxine Bernstein, Salmagundi (Fall 1975~
Winter 1976).
Thompson, Mary Lou, ed., Voices of the
New Feminism, Beacon Press (Boston,
1971); especially the section on “ideo-
logy”
Vogel, Lise, “Fine Arts and Feminism,”
Feminist Studies (vol. 2, no. 1, 1974).
Working Papers on Socialist Feminism,
New American Movement (Chicago, 1972).
PERIODICALS
Arts in Society, special issue on “Women
and the Arts” (Fall, 1974).
Everywoman, special issue on women artists
from California (May, 1971).
Film Llibrary Quarterly, special issue on
“Women in Film” (Winter 1971-72).
The Feminist Art Journal (Brooklyn, New
York).
The Fox, nos. 1, 2, 3 (New York, 1975-76);
especially articles by Sarah Charlesworth,
Elizabeth Hess and Ginny Reath, Carolee
Schneemann, and May Stevens.
Green Mountain Quarterly (Feb., 1976). Art-
icles by Eleanor Marx on “The Woman
Question,” Henriette Rolan-Holst on
“Feminism, Working Women, and Social
Democracy,” Tiresias on “Reviewing
Feminist Revolution Today.”
Left Curve: Art and Revolution (San
Francisco).
Quest: A Feminist Quarterly (Washington,
D.C.); especially the following issues and
articles: Charlotte Bunch, “Reform Tool
Kit,” in Processes of Change (Summer,
1974), Money, Fame, and Power (Fall,
1974); Karen Kollias, “Class Realities:
Create A New Power Base”; (Winter, 1975);
Alexa Freeman and Jackie MacMillan,
“Prime Time: Art and Politics,” in Future
Visions and Fantasies (Summer, 1975);
Jackie St. Joan, “Who Was Rembrandt’s
Mother?,” Charlotte Bunch and Beverly
Fisher, “What Future for Leadership,” and
Bertha Harris, “The Lesbian: The Work-
maker, The Leader,” in Leadership (Spring,
1976); Charlotte Bunch, “Beyond Either/
Or: Feminist Options,” and Jane Flax,
“Do Feminists Need Marxism?” in Kaleido-
scope (Summer, 1976).
Socialist Revolution, ““Socialism and Fem-
inism,” articles by Easton, Berkely, Oak-
land Women’s Union, and Eli Zaretsky
(Jan.-March, 1974); “The National Confer-
ence on Socialist Feminism: Speeches and
Report (no. 26, Oct.-Dec., 1975).
Sparerib (London, England).
Take One, special issue on “Women in
Film” (vol. 3, no. 2,1972).
Toward Revolutionary Art (San Francisco,
Ca.).
Womanart (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
Women Artists Newsletter (New York).
Women and Film (Santa Monica, Ca.,
1972-75).
107
This bibliography is in no way compre-
hensive, nor does it include the many
books and publications already well
known to feminists. Instead, we have tried
to present lesser-known articles and pamph-
lets along with works that we feel are
essential to an understanding of the rela-
tionship of feminism, art and politics.
Anonymous Was A Woman, Feminist Art
Program, California Institute of the Arts
(Valencia, Ca., 1975).
Art: A Woman’s Sensibility, Feminist Art
Program, California Institute of the Arts
(Valencia, Ca., 1974).
Baxandall, Lee, Ed., Radical Perspectives
in the Arts, Pelican (Baltimore, 1972).
Beauvoir, Simone de, “Simone de Beauvoir
et la Lutte de Femmes,” special issue of
D’Arc, no. 61,1975.
Bebel, August, Woman Under Socialism,
Schocken Books (New York, 1971).
Berger, John, Ways of Seeing, Viking Press
(New York, 1972).
Blumenfeld, Gina, “What Is to Be Undone
in the Women’s Movement,” Liberation,
(Feb., 1975).
Braderman, Joan, “Report: The First Festi-
val of Women’s Films,” Artforum (Sept.,
1972).
Bunch, Charlotte and Myron, Nancy, ed.,
Class and Feminism: A Collection of Essays
from The Furies, Diana Press (Baltimore,
1974).
Chicago, Judy, Through the Flower: My
Struggle as a Woman Artist, Doubleday
(Garden City, N.J., 1975).
Cockcroft, Eva, “Abstract Expressionism—
Weapon of the Cold War,” Artforum
(vol.12, no. 10, June, 1974).
Davis, Angela, ed., If They Come in the
Morning: Voices of the Resistance, New
American Library (New York, 1971); includes
writings by Bettina Aptheker, Erika Huggins,
Margaret Burnham, Fania Davis, and others.
Deming, Barbara, “Two Perspectives on
Women'’s Struggle,” Liberation (June, 1973).
Deren, Maya, “Writings on Film by Maya
Deren,” Film Culture (no. 39, Winter, 1965).
Duncan, Carol, “Male Domination and
Virility in 20th Century Art,”" Artforum,
(Dec., 1973).
Duncan, Carol, “When Greatness is a Box
of Wheaties,”” Artforum (Oct., 1976).
Eber, Irene, “Images of Women in Recent
Chinese Fiction: Do Women Hold Up Half
the Sky?,” Signs (Autumn, 1976).
Figes, Eva, Patriarchal Attitudes: The Case
for Women in Revolt, Fawcett (Greenwich,
Conn., 1971).
Gluck, Sherna, ed., From Parlor to Prison,
Vintage (New York, 1976).
Guettel, Charnie, Marxism and Feminism,
Women’s Educational Press (Ontario,
Canada, 1974).
Interviews With Women in the Arts (part
1 and 2), Women in the Arts Publication,
The School of Visual Arts (New York,
1975, 1976).
Jenness, Linda, ed., Feminism and Social-
ism, Pathfinder Press (New York, 1972).
Kearns, Martha, Kathe Kollwitz: Woman
and Artist, The Feminist Press (Old West-
bury, 1976).
Kollontai, Alexandra, The Autobiography
of a Sexually Emancipated Communist
Woman, Schocken Books (New York, 1975).
Kozloff, Max, ““American Painting During
the Cold War,” Artforum (May 1973).
Larguia, lIsabel, and Dumoulin, John,
“Towards a Science of ‘Women’s Libera-
tion’,” NACLA Newsletter (no. 10, 1972).
Lasson, Kenneth, The Workers, Bantam
Books (New York, 1972); especially “The
Maid,” “The Waitress,” and “The Telephone
Operator.”
Lippard, Lucy R., From the Center: Feminist
Essays on Women’s Art, Dutton (New York,
1976).
Looker, Robert, ed., Rosa Luxemburg,
Selected Political Writings, Grove Press,
Inc. (New York, 1974).
Lopate, Carol, “Women and Pay for House-
work,” Liberation (May-June, 1974).
Mitchell, Juliet, Psychoanalysis and Fem-
inism, Pantheon (New York, 1974).
Mitchell, Juliet, “Women and Equality,”
Partisan Review (Summer, 1975).
Mitchell, Juliet, Woman’s Estate, Vintage
(New York, 1971).
“More on Women’s Art: An Exchange,”
Diane Burko, Mary Beth Edelson, Harmony
Hammond, Miriam Schapiro, Benson
Woodroofe, Saribenne Stone, and Dona
Nelson, Art in America (Nov.-Dec. 1976).
Women'’s responses and Lawrence Allo-
way’s reply to his article “Women’s Art
in the 1970’s,” Art in America (May-June,
1976).
Nochlin, Linda, “Why Are There No Great
Women Artists?,”” Art News (Jan. 1971).
O’Neill, William L. ed., Women at Work,
Quadrangle (New York, 1972); comprised
of “The Long Day” by Dorothy Richardson
and “Inside the New York Telephone
Company” by Elinor Langer.
Raven, Arlene, “Women’s Art: The Develop-
ment of a Theoretical Perspective,”
Womanspace Journal (no.1,1973).
Redstockings, ed., Feminist Revolution
(New York, 1975).
Rich, Adrienne, “The Kingdom of the
Fathers,” Partisan Review (vol. 43, no. 1,
1976).
Rowbotham, Sheila, Hidden From History,
Random House (New York, 1974).
Rowbotham, Sheila, Woman’s Conscious-
ness, Man’s World, Penguin (Baltimore,
1973).
Rowbotham, Sheila, Women, Resistance,
and Revolution, Vintage Books (New York,
1974); extensive bibliography.
Sontag, Susan, “The Third World of
Women,” Partisan Review (vol. 40, no. 2,
1973).
Sontag, Susan, “Women, the Arts, and the
Politics of Culture: An Interview with
Susan Sontag,” by Robert Bayers and
Maxine Bernstein, Salmagundi (Fall 1975~
Winter 1976).
Thompson, Mary Lou, ed., Voices of the
New Feminism, Beacon Press (Boston,
1971); especially the section on “ideo-
logy”
Vogel, Lise, “Fine Arts and Feminism,”
Feminist Studies (vol. 2, no. 1, 1974).
Working Papers on Socialist Feminism,
New American Movement (Chicago, 1972).
PERIODICALS
Arts in Society, special issue on “Women
and the Arts” (Fall, 1974).
Everywoman, special issue on women artists
from California (May, 1971).
Film Llibrary Quarterly, special issue on
“Women in Film” (Winter 1971-72).
The Feminist Art Journal (Brooklyn, New
York).
The Fox, nos. 1, 2, 3 (New York, 1975-76);
especially articles by Sarah Charlesworth,
Elizabeth Hess and Ginny Reath, Carolee
Schneemann, and May Stevens.
Green Mountain Quarterly (Feb., 1976). Art-
icles by Eleanor Marx on “The Woman
Question,” Henriette Rolan-Holst on
“Feminism, Working Women, and Social
Democracy,” Tiresias on “Reviewing
Feminist Revolution Today.”
Left Curve: Art and Revolution (San
Francisco).
Quest: A Feminist Quarterly (Washington,
D.C.); especially the following issues and
articles: Charlotte Bunch, “Reform Tool
Kit,” in Processes of Change (Summer,
1974), Money, Fame, and Power (Fall,
1974); Karen Kollias, “Class Realities:
Create A New Power Base”; (Winter, 1975);
Alexa Freeman and Jackie MacMillan,
“Prime Time: Art and Politics,” in Future
Visions and Fantasies (Summer, 1975);
Jackie St. Joan, “Who Was Rembrandt’s
Mother?,” Charlotte Bunch and Beverly
Fisher, “What Future for Leadership,” and
Bertha Harris, “The Lesbian: The Work-
maker, The Leader,” in Leadership (Spring,
1976); Charlotte Bunch, “Beyond Either/
Or: Feminist Options,” and Jane Flax,
“Do Feminists Need Marxism?” in Kaleido-
scope (Summer, 1976).
Socialist Revolution, ““Socialism and Fem-
inism,” articles by Easton, Berkely, Oak-
land Women’s Union, and Eli Zaretsky
(Jan.-March, 1974); “The National Confer-
ence on Socialist Feminism: Speeches and
Report (no. 26, Oct.-Dec., 1975).
Sparerib (London, England).
Take One, special issue on “Women in
Film” (vol. 3, no. 2,1972).
Toward Revolutionary Art (San Francisco,
Ca.).
Womanart (Brooklyn, N.Y.).
Women Artists Newsletter (New York).
Women and Film (Santa Monica, Ca.,
1972-75).
107
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