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...animator Tex Avery turned Little Red into “Red Hot Riding Hood,” a Hollywood stripper, and the wolf into a lusty club-goer who springs into a “full-body erection.” Throughout the 1970s, the story became a regular feminist tool for calling attention to female victimization, and women repeatedly rewrote the story to cast Red as a triumphant heroine (stabbing the wolf with a sewing knife and wearing his fur), the wolf as a slavering date-rapist, or both. Anne Sexton’s poetic version from Transformations gets...

Author: By Emma Firestone, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER | Title: Into The Woods | 12/5/2002 | See Source »

...McGovern and Carter campaigns and used his tenure as attorney general to fight for consumers. He is an anomaly for both Arkansas and 1978. He said he might ask for a state tax increase if food and drugs were exempted from the sales tax; his wife is an ardent feminist who uses her maiden name, and he is a competent jazz saxophonist. He looks like a Kennedy and even breaks his campaigning for impromptu touch-football games. Along with Alabama's ["Fob"] James, 44, Florida's [Robert] Graham, 42, and South Carolina's Richard Riley, 45, he is part...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: 24 Years Ago In TIME | 11/18/2002 | See Source »

...1950s "women's pictures" (magnificent obsession, all that heaven allows, imitation of life). Universal Studios decreed the improbable luxe of their suburban decor and the oversaturated colors of the films' palette. reviewers of the time dismissed these films (though audiences lapped them up), but over the years academics, feminist theorists and the ga-ga cinephile community have insisted on a re-evaluation. They see in Sirk's films' sympathy for his painfully repressed heroines a slyly subversive assault on the bland values that strangled them...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Movies: A Heaven of Magnificent Obsessions | 11/18/2002 | See Source »

...This year we had a lot of new freshmen who felt alienated when they realized Harvard was no feminist haven,” adds Jessica M. Rosenberg ’04, the publicity chair...

Author: By Amelia E. Lester and Sarah M. Seltzer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: Students Use Groups To Find Their Niche | 11/7/2002 | See Source »

...trying to create a feminist community, our social activities have inherently political content,” she says...

Author: By Amelia E. Lester and Sarah M. Seltzer, CRIMSON STAFF WRITERSS | Title: Students Use Groups To Find Their Niche | 11/7/2002 | See Source »

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