Feminist Lives: Women, Feelings, and the Self in Post-War Britain

Published in 2023
271 pages

epub



Lynn Abrams is Chair of Modern History at the University of Glasgow where she works on modern women’s and gender history. She has published extensively on British and European social history including The Making of Modern Woman: Europe 1789-1918 (2002), Myth and Materiality in a Women’s World: Shetland 1800 to the Present (2005), and Oral History Theory (2016).

What is this book about?
Could women be feminist without feminism? Could they foster feminist activism without a movement or an ideology? Could they recraft ways of being female without a plan? Feminist Lives adopts a woman-centred approach to explore these questions and to understand how British women charted a new way of being female in the three decades before the Women’s Liberation Movement. By focusing on the ‘transition’ generation of women who were born in the long 1940s and who grew to maturity in the 1950s, 60s, and 70s, the book demonstrates that it was they who developed the aspirational model of womanhood that then emerged after 1970 as the norm amongst women in the global north.

In doing so, Feminist Lives seeks to fill ‘the feminist history gap’, countering a narrative that has for too long neglected this generation of women as fusty and failing, and as just not feminist enough. Using women’s voices as the book’s evidential and emotional core as they describe themselves, their relationships, their feelings and actions, this volume analyses the modes by which women constructed a modern self, built upon new ways of living, feeling, and being.