All Articles tagged feminism
Special issues: creative works
February 05, 2025 AEST This article weaves together women’s stories to find commonality and difference across three nations and three sets of practices to illustrate how women operate as writers, embroiderers, pioneers, and survivors.
Special Issues: scholarly article
July 31, 2023 AEST When poetry invokes memory, anchoring people to their pasts and identities, it frequently reveals that, at best, memory offers a precarious connection to what is certain or secure.
Special Issues: scholarly article
October 27, 2021 AEST In transforming literary narratives from page to screen in a third wave feminist context, teen film adaptations present makeover narratives that simultaneously empower and oppress teen girl figures...
Special Issues: scholarly article
October 27, 2021 AEST Here we respond to the making of Marvellous (2021), a theatre work about ageing, and reflect on mothering and daughtering generally and our relationships with our nonagenarian mothers in particular.
Scholarly articles
April 29, 2018 AEST A group of five women academics come together to share their creative writing and theorising about collaborative writing processes in papers, chapters, and conference presentations.
Special Issues: scholarly article
October 31, 2016 AEST This article considers how treatment of Ophelia’s death in twenty-first century has been the significant narrative turning point for adaptations and appropriations...
Scholarly articles
April 29, 2014 AEST This paper explores how I combine creative expression with autoethnography and feminist theory to fulfil my PhD project objectives. My television drama series examines sexism, gender roles and gender-assigned occupations.
Special Issues: scholarly article
October 31, 2013 AEST Our cookery book is a fine example of domestic feminism, iced with patriotism, which was first published during WW1. It is much more than a collection of recipes...
Scholarly articles
October 30, 1997 AEST I was first alerted to the possibilities for feminists of using the internet creatively when I read a draft of Dale Spender's Nattering on the Net. The ideas excited me.