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  1. Are we all Pussy Riot? On narratives of feminist return and the limits of transnational solidarity.Elizabeth Groeneveld - 2015 - Feminist Theory 16 (3):289-307.
    On Friday 17 August 2012, members of the feminist collective Pussy Riot were sentenced to two years in jail after their staging of a musical protest in a Russian Orthodox church. This article analyses Western news media responses to the Pussy Riot affair. It first examines how the event has resonated across various news media, activist, and social media networks. Focusing on the phrase, ‘We are all Pussy Riot’, which became a Twitter hashtag following the incarceration of Pussy Riot members, (...)
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  • Newsletter networks in the feminist history and archives movement.Cait McKinney - 2015 - Feminist Theory 16 (3):309-328.
    This article examines how networks have been critical to the construction of feminist histories. The author examines the publication Matrices: A Lesbian/feminist Research Newsletter (1977–1996), to argue that a feminist network mode can be traced through the examination of small-scale print newsletters that draw on the language and function of networks. Publications such as Matrices emerge into wide production and circulation in the 1970s alongside feminist community archives, and newsletters and archives work together as interconnected social movement technologies. Newsletters enabled (...)
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  • Archive Fan-Fiction: Experimental Archive Research Methodologies and Feminist Epistemological Tactics.Holly Pester - 2017 - Feminist Review 115 (1):114-129.
    This essay proposes that subcultural practices such as gossip and fan writing are feminist epistemologies that can form radical archive inquiry and knowledge production, and creative outputs. Drawing on feminist new materialism and archive theory, I develop a set of principles for practice-based research methodologies that incorporate a researcher's intersubjective relationship with archive matter (e.g. records, documents, classification systems, social-material contexts) and consider the production of knowledge from such research as forms of tabulation. Fabulation here is seen as part of (...)
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  • Archival Experiments, Notes and (Dis)orientations.Chandra Frank & Nydia A. Swaby - 2020 - Feminist Review 125 (1):4-16.
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  • Backward glances: Feminism, nostalgia and Joan Braderman’s The Heretics (2009).Roxanne Loree Runyon & Michelle Meagher - 2017 - Feminist Theory 18 (3):343-356.
    Although nostalgia is a much-maligned orientation to the world, feminist scholars including Heather Hillsburg (2013) and Kate Eichhorn (2015) have argued that it might be recuperated for feminist ends. This article mobilises the call to rethink nostalgia through an analysis of the feminist stories and storytelling in Joan Braderman’s 2009 film, The Heretics. A documentary about a feminist collective founded in New York City in the 1970s, The Heretics sets up a way of thinking about feminism’s past that is steeped (...)
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  • Doing feminism: Event, archive, techné.Samantha C. Thrift & Carrie A. Rentschler - 2015 - Feminist Theory 16 (3):239-249.
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