Zitouni, Benedikte
[USL-B]
This paper aims to bring back a piece of history. It tells the story of thousands of women who gathered in peace camps and parades in the early 1980s in order to stake a femi- nistclaimagainstnuclearwarfareandthecapitalist economicsofdestruction.Ittakesaclose look at the first ecofeminist gathering in Amherst (1979) and the ensuing Three Mile Island Parades (‘80), Pentagon Actions in Washington DC (‘80 & ‘81) and San Francisco (‘81). It also examines women’s peace camps, in particular those of Greenham Common near New- bury, England (‘81-’87), of Puget Sound, Washington and of Seneca, New York (1983). Ra- therthanarguingtheimportanceoftheseprotests,thepaper describesthem.Thepaperdraws on the protestors’ testimonies using their own published writings and archival data to show how ecofeminism is above all an innovative, transformative and life-affirming way of doing politics. The paper emphasizes emotions, not only of anger and fear but also of joy, and shows how these emotions fueled the protests. It revives the enthusiasm of crowds and small groups resisting together while paying attention to the clever organizing that allowed these women to gather in the first place. In sum, the paper excavates and details the story of the eco- feministcampsand paradessothatwemaylearnfromthemforpoliticalactiontoday.
Bibliographic reference |
Zitouni, Benedikte. Distruzione planetaria, ecofemministe et politiche di trasformazione nei primi anni '80. In: DEP Deportate Esuli Profughe : rivista telematica di studi sulla memoria femminile, Vol. XVI, no.41-42, p. 1-25 (2020) |
Permanent URL |
http://hdl.handle.net/2078.3/231952 |