1st Edition
Nevertheless, They Persisted Feminisms and Continued Resistance in the U.S. Women’s Movement
Acknowledgements; Introduction; Chapter 1: The Making of a March: Identity, Intersectionality and the Diffusion of U.S. Feminism - Jo Reger; Section 1: Activists; Chapter 2: Identifying with Inclusivity: Intersectional Chicana Feminisms - Fátima Suárez; Chapter 3: Already Feminists: Transfeminist Histories, Hurdles, and Futures – Miriam J. Abelson; Chapter 4: Online Feminism is Just Feminism: Offline and Online Movement Persistence – Alison Crossley; Chapter 5: The ‘Man Question’ in Feminism - Kelsy Kretschmer and Kristen Barber; Chapter 6: Anti-Trafficking and Feminism: Bringing in Survivors as Movement Activists - Lillian Taylor Jungleib; Section 2: Issues; Chapter 7: #FemGA #SayHerName #NotHereForBoys: Feminist Spillover in U.S. Social Movements 2011-2016 - Heather McKee Hurwitz; Chapter 8: Activism Against Sexual Assault on Campus: Origins, Opportunities, and Outcomes – Nancy Whittier; Chapter 9: The Messy Politics of Menstrual Activism - Chris Bobel and Breanne Fahs; Chapter 10: The Continuing Battle Over Abortion and Reproductive Rights - Deana A. Rohlinger and Jessi Grace; Chapter 11: Ecofeminism and Climate Justice - Corrie Grosse; Chapter 12: Women, Gender, and Feminism at Work - Allison Elias; Contributor biographies; Index
Biography
Jo Reger is professor of sociology at Oakland University in Michigan. She is the author of Everywhere and Nowhere: Contemporary Feminism in the United States (2012), the editor of Different Wavelengths: Studies of Contemporary Feminism in the United States (2005) and a co-editor of Identity Work in Social Movements (2008). Her work on the U.S. women’s movements has appeared in a variety of journals including Gender & Society and Qualitative Sociology.






