Listing 1 - 1 of 1 |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
When thousands of women gathered in 1983 to protest the stockpiling of nuclear weapons at a rural upstate New York military depot, the area was shaken by their actions. What so disturbed residents that they organized counterdemonstrations, wrote hundreds of letters to local newspapers, verbally and physically harassed the protestors, and nearly rioted to stop one of the protest marches? Louise Krasniewicz reconstructs the drama surrounding the Women's Encampment for a Future of Peace and Justice in Seneca County, New York, analyzing it as a clash both between and within communities. She shows how debates about gender and authority-including questions of morality, patriotism, women's roles, and sexuality-came to overshadow arguments about the risks of living in a nuclear world. Vivid ethnography and vibrant social history, this work will engage readers interested in American culture, women's studies, peace studies, and cultural anthropology.
812 Ideologie --- 848 Demografie --- 858.1 Politiek geweld --- 861 Vredesbeweging --- 863 Pacifisme --- 873 Wapenbeheersing --- 882.4 Noord-Amerika --- Antinuclear movement --- Women and peace --- Social aspects --- Seneca Army Depot. --- Peace and women --- Peace --- Women pacifists --- Anti-nuclear movement --- Antinuclear protest movement --- Nuclear freeze movement --- Protest movement, Antinuclear --- Social movements --- Nuclear disarmament --- Nuclear power plants --- Romulus, N.Y. --- History of the Americas
Listing 1 - 1 of 1 |
Sort by
|