Women S Movement
Women S Movement
Women S Movement
Florence Binard
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URL: http://journals.openedition.org/rfcb/1688
DOI: 10.4000/rfcb.1688
ISSN: 2429-4373
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Florence Binard, « The British Women’s Liberation Movement in the 1970s: Redefining the Personal
and the Political », Revue Française de Civilisation Britannique [Online], XXII- Hors série | 2017, Online
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rfcb/1688 ; DOI : 10.4000/rfcb.1688
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The British Women’s Liberation Movement in the 1970s: Redefining the Personal... 1
Florence Binard
1 Historians and founders of the British Women’s Liberation Movement (BWLM) consider
that the year 1970 marked the start of the movement (Sally Alexander, Françoise Barret-
Ducroq, Barbara Caine, Martin Pugh, Lynne Segal, Sheila Rowbotham). They mention two
major events that took place that year: the first BWLM Conference in Oxford from 27
February to 1 March which gathered between 500 and 600 participants, many more than
expected, and the protest against a Miss World beauty competition held in London on 20
November which brought the attention of the movement into the public and media arena.
1
It is to be noted, however, that the BWLM was influenced by and took place within a
context of diverse contestation movements that had emerged in the 1960s in Britain,
parts of Europe and also in the United States (Student Revolution, Sexual Revolution,
Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament (CND), Civil Rights Movement, Hippie Movement, Gay
Rights). As underlined by historians, the publication in 1963 of Betty Friedan’s best seller
The Feminine Mystique2 had a profound influence on second-wave feminism in the United
States but also in Britain.3 The book was a virulent condemnation of the consumer society
that fed the myth of the fulfilled housewife and mother, making women prisoners of their
homes and depriving them of their lives. As Betty Friedan put it:
The feminine mystique has succeeded in burying millions of American women alive.
There is no way for these women to break out of their comfortable concentration
camps except by finally putting forth an effort – that human effort which reaches
beyond biology, beyond the narrow walls of home, to help shape the future. 4
2 In the USA, The Feminine Mystique and its author contributed to the creation, in 1966, of
the National Organization of Women (NOW) and more generally of the AWLM whose
modes of actions and organisation inspired British feminists.5 Both the concept of
“consciousness-raising” and the slogan “The personal is political” which were central in
the British WLM, first appeared in the United States.6 But, if it is undeniable that the
American WLM was crucial to the development of the BWLM, the latter was not simply an
offshoot of the American movement, it had its own home-grown specificities and differed
in a number of ways. Whereas the American movement was heavily influenced by the
civil rights movement and led by white liberal middle-class women on the one hand and
by radicals who placed the emphasis on sexual liberation on the other, the BWLM
emerged, to a large extent, from the British New Left, from Socialist and Marxist groups
in which women’s issues had often been dismissed as personal ones. 7
now able to fully control their fertility.11 As Sheila Rowbotham stated: “It was ignored that
it was rather naïve to expect women to fulfil some abstracted ‘natural’ function in a most
unnatural society particularly when contraceptives were reducing the time women were spending
in childbirth”.12 For feminist Ann Oakley this evolution meant profound lifestyle changes
for many women who came to realise that “the so-called consequences of the reproductive
division between the sexes” [were] no longer a 'natural' destiny, that they [had] become outdated
in so far as couples [could] “choose when they [should] have babies, and who [should] feed them”.
13
She argued that technology had altered the impact of biology thus enabling a
redefinition of the conceptions of femininity and masculinity. In her ground-breaking
book, Sex, Gender and Society (1972), she defended the idea of distinguishing between sex
and gender:
‘Sex’ is a word that refers to the biological differences between male and female:
the visible difference in genitalia, the related difference in procreative function.
‘Gender’ however is a matter of culture: it refers to the social classification into
‘masculine’ and ‘feminine’.14
6 This theorisation which was shared by the majority of feminists in the early 1970s 15 has
proven crucial to the development of feminism and gender studies ever since. Women
became aware that their subordinate position to men was not determined by so-called
natural traits but mostly due to conditioning through unequal social structures. They
were realising that there are no fundamental differences between the sexes bar those
concerned with reproduction and this growing awareness that the “feminine destiny”
was a myth led them to question their positions on both political and personal grounds.
The BWLM was a national movement that gathered its strength from its grassroots at
local level, through the creation and existence of thousands of women’s groups
throughout the country. It was characterised by a myriad different types of public actions
led by women that ranged from demonstrations, protest marches, strikes to music
festivals, artistic events or drama performances; from workshops to conferences, that
were heavily publicised and analysed thanks to a flourishing multifaceted feminist press.
It lasted over a decade until the early 1980s when it lost its impetus under the
conservative government of Margaret Thatcher but there is no denying that it has had
profound long term impacts on mentalities, especially on the way women see themselves
and are seen in society.
published in 1969 in the underground left-wing paper, Black Dwarf . 20 But if the location of
the first BWLM Conference at Ruskin College in Oxford, was a reflection of the left-wing
political positioning of the movement, the event also marked the distancing of the
women’s movement from left-wing organisations and groups. As Sheila Rowbotham
pointed out: “Propaganda for domestic bliss did not only come from the right. ‘Left-wing’
sociologists stood firm on the sanctity of the family”.21 Indeed, although resistance to women’s
emancipation was much stronger among those on the political right, the issue extended
beyond party politics as feminists soon recognised. The fact that when the idea of
working on women’s history had been put forward at a Ruskin History Workshop, in 1969,
it was greeted with laughter by the male audience22 showed that sexism ran rampant
across the political spectrum. The vast majority of British feminists described themselves
as socialists and believed that feminism was inseparable from socialism, however, many
grew disillusioned with their male ‘comrades’ who paid lip service to feminism and
promised equality once the revolution was achieved but who showed no inclinations
whatsoever to treat women on an equal footing with men in the meantime. Many, like
Sheila Rowbotham or Sally Alexander had come to realise that they needed to create their
own organisations to address women’s issues. Their analyses led them to place the
‘sacrosanct’ family at the heart of the capitalist exploitation of women but also as the
foundation unit of patriarchal society and therefore of women’s oppression and
exploitation by men:
Although in need of protection from different circumstances, both working-class
and middle-class men combine to secure their sanctuary. The condition of the
preservation of the ‘ideal’ family as of the ‘ideal’ fuck are definitions of female
nature which are not only imposed, but imposed in order to maintain the interest
men have in finding compensation from the exploitation and alienation capitalism
forces on them at work.23
8 The Night Cleaners’ Campaign between 1970 and 1973 was a blatant illustration of the fact
that the exploitation of women workers was both gender and class based. As underlined
by George Stevenson, despite the support of the Cleaners Action group (CAG), composed
of cleaners, women’s liberationists, and socialists, male trade unionists and the trade
unions were reluctant to give their full support to the cleaners. In many ways their
approach to women’s work reflected their sexist views: “In a repeat of those arguing the
Dagenham women were working for ‘pin money’, the TGWU [Transport and General
Workers’ Union] perceived the strikers as women before they were workers”.24
9 In a special issue of the feminist magazine, Shrew, women were encouraged to unionise
despite the acknowledged shortcomings of the unions regarding women’s issues:
Some people are very critical of unions. They say they are bureaucratic and only
concerned to improve wages. Also, the structure of unions tends to exclude women
from the executive, so the particular interests of women are not considered.
We recognise that unions have many limitations, and that these limitations are
most obvious in the case of women workers. However, to join a union is still the
necessary first step if women are going to get better conditions at work. 25
10 Although issues of race and racism were given much more attention in the United States
than in Britain, they were not ignored. Like American first and second-wave feminists,
British feminists compared women to Black people. They argued that both had been
brainwashed into believing that they were naturally and biologically suited to menial
tasks and that their happiness was found in subordinate positions: “If you’re black,
working class and a woman, you lose out three times over” .26 - –
11 The Grunwick Strike which lasted nearly two years, from August 1976 to July 1978 and
whose aim was to obtain the right to unionise is another example of the limits of trade
union support to women workers. It is presented as “one of the most important and
significant strikes of the 1970s” on the site of the Working Class Movement Library
(WCML),27 it is also remembered as the first industrial dispute involving mainly women of
colour. Led by Jayaben Desai and Kalaben Patel, a group composed mainly of female Asian
workers dissatisfied with the way they were treated by the management of the firm, went
on strike and demanded the right to join a union. Although they had the support of rank
and file unionists, the dispute ended with the defeat of the strikers because the
leadership of the TUC and APEX (Association of professional Executive, Clerical and
Computer Staff) retreated from mass picketing and withdrew their support28 leaving the
women, once again, disillusioned with trade unions. As Amrit Wilson underlined:
At Grunwick this unity of the working class was achieved. Hundreds of trade
unionists came day after day to support the Grunwick strikers on the picket line.
But in the end it wasn’t enough because they hadn’t the courage to confront and
defy the handful of men who control the trade union bureaucracy. The white
working class had been weakened by their dependence on these leaders. 29
12 Many feminists from the women’s movement also gave their support on the picket line
and were welcome by the strikers but interestingly many women of colour did not want
the “help” of white “libbers” in other domains concerning their communities. They felt
that it was up to them to find their own path to emancipation and that this emancipation
would not necessarily mean that they should become westernised:
I think the predominantly white women’s movement would be of very little use to
Asian women in their struggles to liberate themselves as women. They can support
them in their other struggles, and are sometimes doing so. For example, during the
Grunwick strike white feminists have gone out there day after day and helped with
picketing. That is the sort of support they could give to Asian women. On the other
hand, if they try to solve Asian women’s problems for them in their communities it
will make their relationships with Asian women very bad, and achieve nothing.
Because it would be patronising interference and would be seen as such. 30
13 Although the first Black women’s group was formed in Brixton in 1973, British black
feminism really developed in the late 1970s and early 1980s. In 1979 the newly formed
Organisation of Women of Asian and African Descent held a conference in Brixton,
London, which gathered nearly 300 Black women from several big cities (Birmingham,
Brighton, Coventry, Leeds, London, Manchester and Sheffield). The conference insisted on
the necessity for an autonomous Black Women’s Movement in Britain to address issues
specific to Black women who were treated as second-class citizens and suffered a triple
oppression that was “ignored by male-dominated Black groups; by white-dominated
women’s groups; and by middle-class-dominated left groups”.31 This alliance of women of
colour was rooted in their common experience as victims of colonialism and imperialism
which, according to them, outweighed their ethnic and cultural differences. One example
of such common experience was the new immigration laws and the practice of
humiliating virginity tests for fiancées to join their future husbands.
14 The support of socialist feminists to working class women who in the late 1960s had
organised strikes for equal pay and were, thereby, instrumental in the rise of second-
wave feminism in Britain was an important aspect of the BWLM, but the need for a more
global perspective on women’s oppression soon appeared and was to be discussed during
conferences.
WLM Conferences
15 The outcome of the first conference was the adoption of four demands that were branded
as the programme of the BWLM: they were printed on badges, written on banners,
placards and shouted during demonstration marches: (1) Equal pay for equal work, (2)
Equal education and equal opportunities, (3) Free contraception and abortion on demand,
(4) Free 24 hour nurseries.
16 The main objective was to target women’s oppression at its core. Getting married and
having children was identified as the principal cause of women’s subordination because it
meant that women (who were deemed to be “natural” domestic carers) came, as
housewives, under the male financial control of their husbands. The 24-hour nurseries,
sometimes presented or understood as an anti-family measure, as a way for women to
forsake their motherly duties, was in fact intended to provide free childcare for women
whenever they needed it, for instance for women working shifts. Among feminists, it was
widely agreed that the family should not be the primary responsibility of women, that
domestic duties should be shared equally between men and women, that just as men
were, women should be entitled to financial independence. They also defended the idea
that their bodies were their own and although access to contraception and abortion had
been greatly facilitated by the laws passed in the 1960s, there were still battles to be
fought on that front, all the more so as in the mid-1970s, James White, a Labour MP
sponsored a bill to tighten access to abortion.
17 This first conference was followed by numerous local and regional conferences32 but also
by seven national conferences that were held in different cities throughout Britain33 and
which gathered hundreds and even thousands of women.34 These conferences were
organised in a bottom-up manner in that as many local groups as possible were
represented and final decisions were taken at the end during plenary sessions. At the
1974 national conference in Edinburgh, two demands were added to the first four: (5)
Legal and financial independence for all women and (6) the right to a self-defined
sexuality, an end to discrimination against lesbians. And at the Birmingham national
conference in 1978, a seventh demand was adopted: (7) Freedom for all women from
intimidation by the threat or use of male violence, an end to the laws, assumptions and
institutions that perpetuate male dominance and men’s aggression towards women. 35 The
suggestion (put forward by radical feminists among whom were Sheila Jeffreys and
Sandra McNeill) that this 7th demand should replace all six previous demands on the
grounds that nothing could be gained from a patriarchal state and that men were the
enemy, triggered a heated debate. Divisions that had grown over the years came to a head
and the conference became the stage of raw and bitter arguments between the socialist
feminists who insisted that capitalism and patriarchy accounted for women’s social and
financial inferiority and the radical/revolutionary feminists for whom male supremacy
and women’s experiences of sexuality and violence were the roots of women’s
oppression”.36 Because all attempts at structuring the movement had been crushed from
the start and as the BWLM had remained totally non-hierarchical in its organisation, it
meant that there was no mechanism for controlling such an unruly situation. Yet, as the
movement grew, diverging views developed and the divide between socialist feminists
and radical feminists appeared more and more irreconcilable. The idea that women as a
class should free themselves from the tyranny of male aggression by becoming political
lesbians37 and by creating safe separate spaces for women was met with strong negative
reactions from socialist feminists. The Birmingham conference ended in chaos and no-
one dared organise another one after such an experience. It was the last national
conference and it marked the end of a united BWLM. As noted by historian Barbara Caine:
By the 1980s, the very suggestion that there could be one unified feminism was
deemed prescriptive and exclusionary and there was an increasing tendency to
recognize, and even endorse, diversity through the use of the plural ‘feminisms’
rather than of any singular ‘feminism’.38
Laws
18 The scope and the strength of the movement was such that the government could not
ignore the demands of the feminists and was forced to take actions. The movement thus
contributed to major transformations of institutions through the passing of landmark
laws39 notably: The Equal Pay Act of 1970 that came into force in 1975; 40 The Employment
Protection Act of 1975 which made provisions for the protection of pregnant women in
terms of maternity leave and pay; The Sex Discrimination Act of 1975 which aimed to
promote equality between women and men and to provide equal opportunities to both
sexes. It also established the Equal Opportunities Commission (EOC) to which grievances
could be taken in case of unequal treatment; The Domestic Violence and Matrimonial
Proceedings Act of 197641 which enabled married women to obtain a court order against
their husbands; The Housing Act (Homeless Persons) of 1978 which provided
accommodation for battered wives. Although there is no denying that these laws led to
substantial improvements to women’s lives and established the principle of equality
between men and women, they fell short of women’s expectations. For instance, women
were angered at the way authorities were dealing with violence against women as in the
case of the “Yorkshire Ripper crisis” in Leeds, which lasted five years between 1975 and
1980. The recommendations given to women, which consisted in advising them to avoid
going out alone at night, highlighted the lack and inadequacy with which the State
responded to such issues.
19 By the end of the 1970s many feminists were disillusioned with the ability or will of the
State to effect real change as it was clear that there were many loopholes and that law
enforcement was inadequate.42 Employers soon found ways to avoid equality by altering
the job contents so that comparisons between men and women’s work could not be done.
It was not until 1984 that wage parity was achieved for the Ford workers in Dagenham43
and today British women still earn less than men: the overall gender pay gap is 13.9%
according to the Fawcett Society.44 The Domestic Violence Act did not apply to unmarried
women and did not include such violence as marital rape which only became illegal in
1991.45 Above all, despite further legislation, violence against women has remained
widespread as shown by the 2014-15 Crown Prosecution Service Violence against Women
and Girls crime report. 46
nowhere47 and yet, for many, it seemed long overdue. One explanation as to why it took
so long for a movement to emerge was that it was difficult for women to consciously
recognise that they were oppressed, that the dissatisfaction many felt was not caused by “
personal failure” but was the consequence of “an enormous barrage of propaganda which serve
to create what Betty Friedan called ‘the feminine mystique’”.48 Many women were dissatisfied
with their lives but found it difficult to pin down the problem. They had been taught that
they would find happiness in marriage and motherhood and as a consequence when they
felt discontented with their ‘lot’, they tended to blame themselves. In order to overcome
these feelings of guilt, women needed to become aware of the fact that the way they lived
their lives was not determined by immutable biological characteristics but dictated by
socially constructed ideas that were imposed on them and veiled as natural. One way to
achieve this awareness was through consciousness-raising groups.
21 The concept originated in the United States and the phrase was coined by Kathie
Sarachild who had been inspired by Anne Forer following a group meeting during which
she had compared women to working-class men. Her argument had been that just as male
workers needed to be made aware of their oppression, women had to un-cover their own.
Ann Forer had proceeded to ask her women friends to give examples of their own
oppression so that she could raise her own consciousness.49 Kathie Sarachild had
subsequently presented the idea of consciousness-raising groups at the First National
Women’s Liberation Conference near Chicago in 1968.50 The concept soon crossed the
Atlantic and CR groups began to flourish in Britain. CR was understood to be a process
whereby women would become aware of their own oppression and would thereby
develop feminist views and practices.
22 Typical CR groups were small groups composed of ten to fifteen women who would take
turns hosting weekly meetings in their homes. Like in any other gatherings of the WLM,
there were no leaders, no hierarchies. As stated by Françoise Barret-Ducrocq, “It had
been established as a dogma that there should be no hierarchies, no leaders”51 and
women were very careful not to seem to put themselves forward. In a BBC documentary
Ann Oakley recalled with regret that when in 1972 her book, Sex, Gender and Society was
published she did not mention it to her CR group because she did not want to appear to
show off.52 They talked about their personal and intimate lives, about their feelings and
addressed a vast range of issues that were of direct concern to them. In a leaflet entitled
“Women Awake, The Experience of Consciousness-raising”, Sue Brueley listed the 17
topics that were discussed at the CR meetings of the Clapham group she attended in the
early 1970s: our bodies, our childhood, work, relationships with men, relationships with
women, love, couples, jealousy, anger, ‘our greatest’ fear, children, dreams, sexuality,
honesty, ‘positive, negative and puzzling’, images of ourselves, the rest of my life. 53 In
most cases, the groups were closed that is to say that once formed they did not accept
new members. The logic behind this rule was that CR was at the same time an individual
and a collective process and that therefore any addition of new members would entail
repetition and slow down group progress.54 More importantly, groups were meant to
provide spaces for all members to express themselves and find a voice. A specific topic
was chosen for each session and all members personally committed as they presented in
turn and uninterrupted their personal testimonies. If initially women would feel
uncomfortable about revealing intimate parts of their lives, they soon understood the
benefits of engaging in such practices as it became clear that their problems were not just
theirs. Once everyone had spoken, the group would sum up, discuss and analyse what had
been said in order to draw theoretical conclusions.
23 Thus, if CR was designed to enable women to make changes in their own lives, it did not
amount to therapy, as some of its detractors claimed. Its purpose was not for group
members to solve their private problems but to help them discover that what they
thought were failures of their own were in fact shared by other women and as such,
constituted political problems that required collective solutions. For thousands of women
CR was a crucial step in realising that they had been conditioned into believing that their
primary duties were domestic ones. By sharing their private experiences and misgivings
not only did women realise that they were not alone but they learnt to become more
assertive and to challenge existing values. As underlined by Sue Brueley, “The most
fundamental feature of the movement was the idea of ‘the personal is political’, that
women looked to their own lives and learnt from their own experience”.55 CR was
particularly attractive especially in the early years because it provided a frame for
women to look at their personal lives and at themselves in a political way:
This meant going deep, delving into our childhood, our relationships with brothers
and sisters, with our parents, what school had meant for us, how we had been
brought up to view men and what future our parents had brought us up to expect 56.
24 CR groups were women centred and encouraged their members to join in the struggle for
social change at a personal and collective level. They attracted many socialist women who
felt frustrated by the sexist attitude of International Socialists (IS) and other socialist
groups. Sheila Rowbotham explained that
[she] found [herself] in conflict in an increasing number of particular incidents,
sexual banter, the whistling when women spoke, the way in which men divided us
into two, either as comrades or as women they fucked. Once a man told me to stop
being so ‘effeminate’. There was an argument about putting pin-ups in the Black
Dwarf. I began to talk to other women. We all seemed suddenly to be feeling similar
things.57
25 Many feminists deplored the fact that left-wing men regarded women’s demands as
secondary to those of working-class men and belittled CR arguing it was basically a white
bourgeois middle-class approach to liberation by women who were looking for individual
solutions to collective problems. The following comment by Carol Hanisch is an
illustration of the tensions between feminists who put class as a primary concern and
those who put women first: “Those who believe that Marx, Lenin, Engels, Mao, and Ho
have the only and last ‘good word’ on the subject and that women have nothing more to
add will, of course, find these groups [CR groups] a waste of time”. 58 As time went by, CR
groups became more and more attractive to radical feminists, especially lesbians for
whom embodied experiences of sexuality were the roots of women’s oppression and who
felt marginalised by socialists: “IS’s denial of the place of the gay movement in any kind
of revolutionary alignment convinced me of the narrowness of their politics and the basic
inability of the left to take sexism seriously”.59 Although many socialist women realised
that not enough attention was paid to women’s issues within left-wing groups they were
not interested in CR, in discussing their private lives. Like most male socialists, they
believed that capitalism and the class system were responsible for the oppression of the
working class and of women, however, unlike them, they were not prepared to wait for
the demise of capitalism to fight patriarchy. In this perspective, they formed women’s
groups which addressed political issues both from a class-based and a sex-based angle. It
is to be emphasised that the opposition between CR groups and socialist oriented groups
was not as clear-cut as it would appear. Women liberationists agreed on the necessity to
emancipate themselves from traditional and patriarchal values and on the fact that their
bodies were their own.
26 What is more, despite hostile coverage in the media, the claims of the women’s liberation
movement struck a chord among women from all walks of life - not just feminists or
socialist women - and the movement grew in size and scope. Whereas events of national
dimension kept the movement in the public eye, hundreds of small groups, sometimes
composed of only a few individuals, carried on forming at a local level. In many cases,
these groups or workshops were co-ordinated by local Women’s centres, sometimes
subsidised by Labour local authority grants. For instance, in Brighton, between 1974 and
1976, a Women’s centre was established in an abandoned maternity hospital and
benefitted of a £6,000 grant towards renovation.60 The aims and purposes of this growing
number of women’s groups were very diverse and a substantial number of them applied
themselves to effective practical changes and actions. Women also took matters into their
own hands and set up structures to provide help for women who needed it. The opening
of the first refuge for battered wives in Chiswick, West London, in 1971, by Erin Pizzey is
an example of such actions - it led to the formation of the National Women’s Aid
Federation in 1975; the communal or collective crèches were another example. Many
were organised on a voluntary basis and some were funded by local councils as was the
case of the Dartmouth Park Hill nursery in London.61
Publications
27 The underpinning of the movement was the surge in feminist publications.62 Ranging
from leaflets, newspapers and magazines to all kinds of books (fiction, history, theory
etc.) these writings were crucial communication tools between feminists but, equally
important, they were pivotal to reaching out to women who did not feel involved in the
WLM.
28 As underlined by Marsha Rowe63 the technical development of offset lithographic
printing, which had made printing easier and cheaper, had led, in the 1960s, to the
development of an “underground press” spreading a counter culture.64 In the wake of this
underground press,65 feminists were inspired to produce their own press organs to
inform women of the WLM activities but also to make them aware of their oppression:
“When Spare Rib began, we saw it as an activity and consciousness-raising process
combined”.66
29 At the height of the movement, scores of newsletters were produced by local groups in
order to keep women informed of their activities and in 1975, at the national conference
in Manchester, it was decided to set up a Women’s Information and Referral Enquiry
Service (WIRES) which proceeded to create a newsletter (entitled WIRES) for the
movement. Its role was to collect and disseminate information pertaining to women’s
groups throughout the country.67
30 A number of newspapers, magazines and journals also flourished. Usually operated on a
non-profit basis, they were self-financing through subscriptions, donations and fund
raising. The vast majority were against commercial advertising and only promoted
events, publications or sometimes goods which they deemed in keeping with feminist
ideas. All welcomed contributions or testimonies from women who were not directly
involved in the publishing and creation of the journals and their content varied and
reflected the various sensibilities within the BWLM.
31 There were a number of left-wing newspapers which, in some cases, benefitted from the
printing equipment of the political parties they were linked to. Among these, the most
famous were Women’s Voice (1972-1982) published by International Socialists; Red Rag
(c.1973-1980) published by a Marxist collective; Link (1973-84) which was the Communist
Party Women’s Journal or Socialist Woman, National Paper of the Socialist Woman Groups
(1969-80).68 Arena Three, published by the Minorities Research Group (1963-1972) was the
first openly lesbian newspaper, it was followed by Sappho (1972-82) which became the
mouthpiece of the lesbian feminists.69 Women of colour also had their own publications
such as FOWAAD!, the newsletter of the Organisation of Women of Asian and African
Descent (OWAAD) formed in 1978.70 However, the better known magazines were those
that promoted the views of the movement in a wide ranging way. Shrew (1969-74, with
additional issues between 1976 and 78) had started as a newsletter. It was London centred
and could boast a circulation of about 5,000 copies. Produced each month by a different
group of the London Women’s Liberation Workshop, Shrew varied greatly in its political
content and was a perfect illustration of the non-hierarchical and democratic ethos of the
movement.71 But by far the most famous and longest lasting was the monthly magazine,
Spare Rib (1972-1993) 72 whose sales reached 30,000 by the mid-1970s (Pugh 322) and a
national readership of about 100,000. Unlike most other feminist newspapers which were
only purchasable through subscriptions or in feminist bookshops or women’s centres,
Spare Rib was a newsstand magazine available through W H Smith newsagent - one of the
leading news agency chains in Britain - throughout the country. The founders, Rosie
Boycott and Marsha Rowe “decided to incorporate the traditional elements of women’s
magazines into Spare Rib, but to express them in other ways”.73 The aim was to reflect a
broad range of feminist views and concerns through articles on the organisation and
evolution of the women’s movement, on women’s experiences, on women’s history, on
feminist theories and there was an “emphasis on first-hand accounts, written by the
women involved rather than by journalists observing events from the outside”.74 As its
ethos was anti-consumerist it had a highly selective advertising policy.
32 Another key element to feminist publications was the creation of feminist presses. As for
newspapers and magazines, different presses catered for different political stances. For
instance, The Onlywoman Press (1974-2016), a radical lesbian feminist press was established
in London; Sheba (1980-94),75 a “not-for-profit workers’ co-operative” small independent
publisher giving priority to marginalised women: women of colour, lesbians and working-
class women was founded in the UK. However, the most prolific and best established one
was Virago (1973-present). 76 Initially, it undertook to rediscover and publish books
written by women at the beginning of the twentieth century but which were no longer in
print. This endeavour was part of the feminist analysis whereby literary publishing was
political. Starting from the realisation that there were few women authors among the
great names of literature, feminists decided to reclaim women’s literature. 77 This led
them to unveil the sexist mechanisms inherent in the androcentric bias of literary
critique. It showed that, under the guise of universality, the notions of « Classic
Literature » or of « literary canon » excluded women’s writings from the Literary World.
It is to be noted that these presses were able to rely on a widespread network of
alternative and feminist bookshops throughout the country, the London based Sisterwrite
(1978-1986) and Silver Moon (1984-2001) being the most famous ones. These presses were
Conclusion
33 Just as first-wave feminists had been disillusioned by the vote, by the end of the 1970s,
second-wave feminists had come to realise that legislation had failed to bring about the
real changes they had dreamed of. Yet, despite the shortcomings of the legislation in
favour of sex equality, the new laws were symbolic of the State’s recognition of women’s
oppression and as such did play an influential role in raising awareness of discrimination
which gave many women the confidence to fight for their rights. Not only did some
women learn to protest and speak publicly but the vast majority realised that their
dependence on men was neither natural nor inevitable. At the end of the 1970s, feminists
were already able to look back at what the movement had achieved. “We feel that the
women’s movement has, at the very least, raised the consciousness, and encouraged the
self-organization of thousands of women. In doing so it has also begun to challenge
relations of power”.78
34 All things considered it can be stated that the BWLM contributed to the change of
traditional attitudes throughout the population - not just of women or feminists - and
had a profound and lasting impact on gender roles.
35 The 1978 Birmingham conference which led to the split in the movement at national level
only marked the partial failure of second-wave feminism. With the advent of Thatcherism
and neoliberalism, the 1980s saw a clear decline in socialist feminism however this did
not mean the end of feminism, rather, it took on a new turn and became diversified and
“fragmented”, notably in the shape of liberal, radical or black feminism. It is also to be
noted that by establishing the conceptual distinction between sex and gender, second-
wave feminism paved the way for future developments such as those of the transgender
and queer movements and studies that emerged in the 1990s.
36 In the same way as the suffragettes had been stigmatised as ‘unnatural’ women, second-
wave feminists have been portrayed as “bra burners” sexually frustrated ugly man-hating
individuals (spinsters or lesbians). This backlash on feminism has used and abused the
excesses of a marginal minority of radical separatists who were not representative of the
movement. And the fact is that nearly half a century later, very few British people still
adhere to the views on the sexes that were commonly held prior to the WLM - more often
than not they regard them as misogynist and sexist. If many still distance themselves
from feminism, they would not, however, wish to go back on the achievements of the
WLM. They say “I am not a feminist but…” and when asked to mention what feminist
measure or law they disapprove of, they are at pains to find one.
37 Interestingly, out of the four initial demands adopted at the first national conference, the
fourth one - free 24 hour nurseries - was the only demand that had not been put forward
by feminists of previous generations.79 It was also the only one that did not find its way
into legislation. Yet, although its aim was to enable women to work shifts, it was, possibly
the most politically revolutionary one as it would have amounted to placing the
responsibility of childcare onto the state thus freeing mothers (and fathers) from the
duty of looking after their children whenever they needed it and also, crucially, enabling
women’s financial independence. It is to be noted that comparatively little advance has
been made regarding this fourth demand, and yet, recent studies continue to show that
having children puts women at a disadvantage while it benefits men: a “Fatherhood
Bonus” versus a “Motherhood Penalty”, but perhaps even more telling, such
organisations as the Fawcett Society or the TUC, which have published reports on this
subject, do not propose recommendations as daring as 24 hour nurseries80…
38 Florence Binard est maîtresse de conférences habilitée à diriger des recherches. Elle
enseigne la civilisation britannique et les études sur le genre et la diversité à l’UFR
EILA (Études Interculturelles en Langues appliquées), Université Paris Diderot –
Sorbonne Paris Cité. Elle est l’auteure d’une monographie intitulée, Les Mères de la
nation : féminisme et eugénisme en Grande-Bretagne (2016).
NOTES
1. CAINE Barbara, English Feminism 1780-1980, Oxford, OUP, 1997, p.255.
2. By the year 2000, more than 3 million copies of The Feminine Mystique had been sold.
www.nytimes.com (22 June 2016) FOX Margalit, « Betty Friedan, Who Ignited Cause in ‘Feminine
Mystique’ dies at 85 », Feb 5, 2006.
3. See CAINE Barbara, English Feminism 1780-1980, op. cit., p.226 ; PUGH Martin, Women and the
Women’s Movement in Britain (1st ed.1992), London, Macmillan, 2000 (2nd edition) p.316 ;
ROWBOTHAM Sheila, Woman’s Consciousness, Man’s World (first published in 1973), London Pelican,
1977, p.3.
4. FRIEDAN Betty, The Feminine Mystique (1963) London Penguin, 1992, p.293.
5. The protest against the Miss World beauty competition at the Albert Hall in London in 1970
with feminists throwing flour-bombs onto the stage and carrying placards with such titles as
« Miss-conception », « Miss-treated », Miss-placed » etc. was an imitation of a demonstration that
had taken place against the Miss America Contest in Atlantic city in 1968.
6. See HANISCH Carol, « The Personal Is Political : The Women’s Liberation Classic With a New
Explanatory Introduction », 2006, http://www.carolhanisch.org/CHwritings/PIP.html (22 June
2016)
7. PUGH Martin, Women and the Women’s Movement in Britain, op. cit., p.318.
8. The Reform Act of 1918 granted the right to vote to women over the age of thirty. It was only
in 1928 that universal suffrage became a fact in Britain.
9. ROWE Marsha, Spare Rib Reader, Harmondsworth, Penguin, 1982, p.564.
10. MAITLAND Sara, Very Heaven, Looking Back at the 1960s, London, Virago, 1988, p.54.
11. The contraceptive had pill become available to married women in 1961 and to all women in
1967. Abortion had become legal in 1967. (Timeline of the Women’s Liberation Movement - The
British Library, www.bl.uk/sisterhood/timeline )
12. ROWBOTHAM Sheila, Woman’s Consciousness, Man’s World, op. cit., p.6.
13. http://www.annoakley.co.uk/ (April 29, 2016).
14. Ann Oakley, Sex, Gender and Society (1972), http://www.annoakley.co.uk/ (April 29, 2016).
15. See SEGAL Lynne, Is the Future Female ? Troubled Thoughts on Contemporary Feminism (1987),
London, Virago, 1991, p.x.
16. https//www.ruskin.ac.uk/about History (April 29, 2016)
17. ALEXANDER Sally, Becoming a Woman and Other Essays in 19th and 20th Century Feminist History,
London, Virago, 1994, p.249.
18. See TAYLOR Ann, Women in Twentieth-Century Europe, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2008,
p.120 or ALBERTI Johanna, Gender and the Historian, London, Routledge, 2002, p.29.
19. http://www.bl.uk/sisterhood/articles/womens-liberation-a-national-movement (June 28,
2016)
20. ROWBOTHAM Sheila, « My Work », paper presented 31 March 2012 at the IEC (Institut Emilie du
Châtelet) conference « Quarante ans de recherche sur les femmes, le sexe et le genre », organised
by BARRET-DUCROCQ Françoise, http://www.institutemilieduchatelet.org/visualisation-la-video?
id_video=4 (July 2, 2016)
21. ROWBOTHAM Sheila, Woman’s Consciousness, Man’s World, op. cit., p.4.
22. Sally Alexander, Becoming a Woman, op. cit., p.99.
23. ROWBOTHAM Sheila, Woman’s Consciousness, Man’s World, op. cit., p.53.
24. STEVENSON George, « The Women’s Movement and ‘Class Struggle’ : gender, class formation
and political identity in women’s strikes, 1968-78 », Women’s History Review, 2016, p.7.
25. « Night Cleaners and Women’s Liberation », Shrew, n° 9/3, December 1971, p.2.
26. « The ‘Woman Question’ and Cleaners, Shrew, n° 9/3, December 1971, p.7.
27. http://www.wcml.org.uk/our-collections/protest-politics-and-campaigning-for-change/
grunwick/
28. Striking Women : Voices of South Asian Women workers from Grunwick and Gate Gourmet
http://www.leeds.ac.uk/strikingwomen/grunwick
29. WILSON Amrit, Finding A Voice : Asian Women in Britain [1978 and 1984], London Virago, 1988,
p.70.
30. WILSON Amrit, Finding A Voice, op.cit., p.169-70.
31. ROWE Marsha, Spare Rib Reader, op. cit., p.590.
32. See http://www.feministarchivenorth.org.uk/chronology/1977-1.htm
33. Skegness in 1971, Bristol in 1973, Edinburgh in 1974, Manchester in 1975, Newcastle in 1976,
London in 1977 and the last one in Birmingham in 1978.
34. For instance, the 1977 National WLM Conference in London was attended by three thousand
women. See ROWE Marsha, Spare Rib Reader, op. cit., p.581.
35. http://www.bl.uk/sisterhood/timeline.
36. See REES Jeska, « A Look Back at Anger: the Women’s Liberation Movement in 1978 », Women’s
History Review, n° 3/19, July 2010, 337-356.
37. A political lesbian was defined as « a woman-identified woman who does not fuck men. It
does not mean compulsory sexual activity with women », The Leeds Revolutionary Feminist
Group, « Love Your Enemy ? – The Debate Between Heterosexual Feminism and Political
Lesbianism », London, Onlywomen Press, 1981, p.5.
38. CAINE Barbara, English Feminism, op.cit., p.269.
39. See http://www.bl.uk/sisterhood/articles/politics-legislation-and-the-womens-liberation-
movement
40. See http://www.bl.uk/sisterhood/articles/equality-work-and-the-womens-liberation-
movement
41. See http://www.bl.uk/sisterhood/articles/family-children-and-the-womens-liberation-
movement
42. PUGH Martin, Women and the Women’s Movement in Britain, op.cit., p.331.
43. STEVENSON George, « The Women’s Movement and ‘Class Struggle’ », art. cit., p.5.
ABSTRACTS
This article aims to present the main aspects of the British Women’s Liberation Movement of the
1970s. It traces the history of the movement from the first national conference held at the
University of Oxford (Ruskin College) in 1970 to the last national conference held in Birmingham
in 1978. It focuses on the beginnings of the movement, on its influence in the adoption and
improvement of gender equality legislation in Britain and it underlines the profound changes
brought about in the perception and understanding of gender roles in British society. This article
stresses the importance of feminist publications in the dissemination of feminist ideas beyond
feminist circles. It also insists on the crucial role of the practice of consciousness-raising in the
development of feminist theories, notably in the distinction between sex and gender and in the
realisation that “the personal is political”.
Cet article a pour objet de présenter les principaux éléments du mouvement de libération des
femmes au Royaume-Uni dans les années 1970. Il retrace l’histoire du mouvement du premier
congrès national au Ruskin College, Université d’Oxford, en 1970 au dernier congrès national à
Birmingham en 1978. Il s’intéresse aux débuts du mouvement, à son influence sur l’adoption de
lois favorisant l’égalité femmes-hommes et il souligne son impact profond sur la perception et
compréhension des rapports sociaux de sexes au Royaume-Uni. Cet article met l’accent sur
l’importance des publications en matière de dissémination des idées féministes au-delà des
INDEX
Mots-clés: libération des femmes, féminisme, années 1970, politique
Keywords: women’s liberation, feminism, 1970s, politics
AUTHOR
FLORENCE BINARD
Université Paris Diderot, Sorbonne Paris Cité