Global Information Lookup Global Information

Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group information


Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group
Founded1977 (1977)
TypeRadical lesbian feminist organization
Location
  • Leeds, England
Key people
Sheila Jeffreys

The Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group was a feminist organisation active in the United Kingdom in the 1970s and 1980s. While there were a number of contemporary revolutionary feminist organisations in the UK, the Leeds group was 'internationally significant'.[1] The group is remembered chiefly for two reasons. The first is organising the UK-wide ‘Reclaim the Night’ marches in November 1977. The second is the publication of the pamphlet Political Lesbianism: The Case Against Heterosexuality, which advocated political lesbianism. British activist Sheila Jeffreys was closely involved with the group, while UK feminist Julie Bindel has spoken of the group's influence on her, as have many others.[2]

The Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group was founded in 1977, the result of a wider backlash against the perceived dominance of liberal feminism.[3] The group emphasised the importance of women-only spaces and organisation, and identified male violence against women and the threat of it as the keystone in the oppression of women.[3] According to Alison Garthwaite, who was heavily involved with the Leeds group, the group differed from many separatists by their opposition to separatism as a lifestyle, or an end in itself.[3]

The group organised the Reclaim the Night marches that were held in various cities across the United Kingdom on the night of 12 November 1977. They were inspired by night marches which had taken place in Germany with the message that women should be able to walk at night without fear. The marches took place in the context of the ‘Yorkshire Ripper’ murders, where thirteen women and girls were murdered over a five-year period. Feminists were angry not just over the murders but also the police reaction to them. Police had advised women not to go out at night. Not only was this not practical to many women, it was also seen as blaming the victims.[4] As many of the murders took place in the Chapeltown area of Leeds, and because many of the organisers lived in the area, the Leeds march took place there.[3] This drew criticism from some anti-racist campaigners. They argued that since Chapeltown was a mostly-black area, the march risked reinforcing the ‘black beast’ stereotype and drawing unwanted police attention the area. Increasing policing, however, was not a demand of the organisers.[3]

The pamphlet Political Lesbianism: The Case Against Heterosexuality also proved controversial. The pamphlet was published in 1979, having originated from a conference talk given in 1977. It was republished in 1981 under the title Love your enemy? The debate between heterosexual feminism and political lesbianism. The re-publication highlighted some of the responses to the argument. The authors of the pamphlet advocate that women should become lesbians. Lesbian here is defined as a woman who refrains from heterosexual sexual activity, not necessarily a woman who sleeps with other women.[5] It is argued that heterosexuality must be abandoned since heterosexual relations are one of the main ways that women as a whole are kept under systematic control.[6] Women who engage in heterosexual activity are denounced as ‘collaborators with the enemy’.[6] While many women were influenced by the pamphlet, it also evoked a critical reaction.[2] Many heterosexual women were offended at being called collaborators, and the labeling of all men as the enemy of women. Lesbian feminists and others also opposed the suggestion that sexuality was a choice.[2]

  1. ^ Finn Mackay (2015). Radical Feminism: Feminist Activism in Movement. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.
  2. ^ a b c 'My sexual revolution', Julie Bindel, The Guardian, 30 January 2009.
  3. ^ a b c d e Finn Mackay (2014), 'Reclaiming revolutionary feminism'. Feminist Review, 106.
  4. ^ 'Why reclaim the night?'
  5. ^ Onlywomen Press; Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group (1981). Love your enemy?: the debate between heterosexual feminism and political lesbianism. London: Onlywomen Press. p. 5. ISBN 978-0-906500-08-8.
  6. ^ a b Onlywomen Press; Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group (1981). Love your enemy?: the debate between heterosexual feminism and political lesbianism. London: Onlywomen Press. p. 6. ISBN 978-0-906500-08-8.

and 25 Related for: Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group information

Request time (Page generated in 0.837 seconds.)

Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group

Last Update:

The Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group was a feminist organisation active in the United Kingdom in the 1970s and 1980s. While there were a number of contemporary...

Word Count : 657

Political lesbianism

Last Update:

Heterosexual Feminism and Political Lesbianism" with the Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group. They argued that women should abandon support of heterosexuality...

Word Count : 1446

Lesbian flags

Last Update:

In the 1970s it was adopted as a symbol of empowerment by the lesbian feminist community. Women considered asocial by Nazi Germany for not conforming...

Word Count : 1120

Lipstick lesbian

Last Update:

Kathryn (1990). "Skirting the Issue: Lesbian Fashion for the 1990s". Feminist Review (34): 67–78. doi:10.2307/1395306. JSTOR 1395306. Bell, David; Binnie...

Word Count : 1410

Lesbian

Last Update:

does not mean compulsory sexual activity with women." See: Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group "La muger, que con otra muger tenía deleitaciones carnales...

Word Count : 23041

Femme

Last Update:

prominent lesbian feminist figures of aping patriarchal beauty standards for wearing traditional feminine clothing. Black lesbian feminist poet and activist...

Word Count : 3085

History of lesbianism

Last Update:

Heterosexual Feminism and Political Lesbianism" with the Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group. They argued that women should abandon support of heterosexuality...

Word Count : 12155

Sheila Jeffreys

Last Update:

along with other members of the Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group. Its authors stated, "We do think ... that all feminists can and should be lesbians. Our...

Word Count : 2708

Stone butch

Last Update:

Lesbian Archives Lavender Menace Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group Lesbian Art Project Lesbian Avengers Lesbian Feminist Liberation Lesbian Herstory Archives...

Word Count : 525

Lesbian bed death

Last Update:

respondents were typically white, affluent, liberal, and well-educated. Lesbian feminist theorist Marilyn Frye also criticized the study. Frye questioned the methodology...

Word Count : 2535

Lavender Menace

Last Update:

Menace was an informal group of lesbian radical feminists formed to protest the exclusion of lesbians and their issues from the feminist movement at the Second...

Word Count : 1662

Soft butch

Last Update:

Lesbian Archives Lavender Menace Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group Lesbian Art Project Lesbian Avengers Lesbian Feminist Liberation Lesbian Herstory Archives...

Word Count : 622

Butch and femme

Last Update:

sexual relating varied over the course of the 20th century. Some lesbian feminists have argued that butch–femme is a replication of heterosexual relations...

Word Count : 4703

Lesbian literature

Last Update:

"Loving Her Without Class: The Politics of Feminist Love in Ann Allen Shockley's Lesbian Novel". Feminist Formations. 22 (1): 57–75. doi:10.1353/nwsa...

Word Count : 7095

Peter Sutcliffe

Last Update:

the murders, the Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group organised a number of 'Reclaim the Night' marches. The group and other feminists had criticised the...

Word Count : 13727

November 1977

Last Update:

United Kingdom took place, starting with a protest by the Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group in England. A cyclone struck southern India, killing at least...

Word Count : 6761

Lesbian feminism

Last Update:

Some of the lesbian feminist groups, however, were skeptical of separatism. As such, a prominent black lesbian feminist group, the Combahee River Collective...

Word Count : 8567

Onlywomen Press

Last Update:

Compulsory heterosexuality and lesbian existence. ISBN 0906500079. Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group (1981). Love Your Enemy?: The Debate Between Heterosexual...

Word Count : 784

Reclaim the Night

Last Update:

Radical Feminism in Edinburgh. Feminists from Leeds were present at the conference and the Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group organised the first Reclaim...

Word Count : 1566

Lesbian bar

Last Update:

has a history distinct from that of the gay bar. Lesbian bars predate feminist spaces such as bookstores and coffeehouses, and contemporary LGBT services...

Word Count : 7598

Kate Clinton

Last Update:

current politics for her jokes. Clinton is a self-described "fumerist," or feminist humorist. In addition to comedy appearances and one-woman-shows such as...

Word Count : 562

Lesbian pulp fiction

Last Update:

of the books in this span in the 1980s under Naiad, and Cleis Press and Feminist Press have again reissued them. Several writers of this "Golden Age" stood...

Word Count : 4750

List of lesbian feminist organizations

Last Update:

feminist movement active in the 1970s. Lesbian Nation (organisation), lesbian feminist activist group, 1976 until the mid-1980s Leeds Revolutionary Feminist...

Word Count : 827

The Furies Collective

Last Update:

revolution they sought. Their theories are still acknowledged among feminist groups. The Furies Collective, which lived at 219 11th St SE in Washington...

Word Count : 1085

Monique Wittig

Last Update:

Paris. She was also involved in the Féministes Révolutionnaires ("Revolutionary feminists"), a radical feminist group. She published various other works...

Word Count : 3014

PDF Search Engine © AllGlobal.net