feminist futures

Maggie Evans

Is Feminist Poetry a Thing of the Past?

by Maggie Evans, PhD graduate, , UO Department of English

Tasked with composing a short riff on the future of feminist research in American poetics, I set out, naturally, for the library, determined to explore a few beginning questions that sprang to mind. Among them: How do contemporary women poets enact or represent feminism(s) in their poetry? How have the changing political and social goals of feminism affected the thematic and formal choices of feminist writers? How do feminist writers depict or imagine the future? Library, here I come!

Author
Maggie Evans
Publication Year
2013
Publication type
Annual Review
Shannon Elizabeth Bell, front center, with Harts Photovoice Group at their 2009 exhibit in West Virginia. Bell served as a bridge to help women she studied bring forward their stories about devastation to their community by the coal industry.

Activist Research and the Fight Against the Polluter-Industrial Complex

by Shannon Elizabeth Bell, Assistant Professor of Sociology, University of Kentucky

The future I hope to see for feminist research is more scholars engaging in activist research aimed at fighting the tremendous number of environmental injustices that are devastating the lives of women and other vulnerable populations around the world. 

Author
Shannon Elizabeth Bell
Publication Year
2013
Publication type
Annual Review
Miriam Deutsch

Women in STEM: A Wakeup Call

by Miriam Deutsch, Professor, UO Department of Physics, Oregon Center for Optics

Author
Miriam Deutsch
Publication Year
2013
Publication type
Annual Review
Áine Duggan

Research Can Serve as the Anchor for Feminism’s Future

by Áine Duggan, President, National Council on Research for Women

The future of feminism may be over sooner than we think. So goes talk in the public sphere and blogosphere about how celebrities-du-jour and political women alike are running in horror away from the “F” word. You would think the feminist waves were a plague on all our houses. (Curiously, some of their male counterparts are embracing the word; see Patrick Stewart and Dr. Jackson Katz.) 

Author
Áine Duggan
Publication Year
2013
Publication type
Annual Review