Las olas del feminismo, una periodización irreconciliable con la Historia
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2022
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Universidad Complutense, Servicio de Publicaciones
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Márquez Padorno M. (2022). Las olas del feminismo, una periodización irreconciliable con la Historia. Historia y Comunicación Social, 27(2), 381-387. https://doi.org/10.5209/hics.84385
Abstract
La mayor parte de las obras sobre historia de las mujeres y del feminismo publicadas en las últimas décadas basan su recorrido en “las olas del feminismo”, término nacido en 1968 cuando un activismo renovado reivindicó derechos e igualdad tras años de repliegue y caducidad de lo conseguido hasta entonces. Las nuevas mujeres de los 70 buscaron la herencia de las sufragistas, pero escenificando una marcada distancia. El oleaje para describir los diferentes procesos del feminismo en la Historia se ha hecho tan canónico que ya no se reconoce como una ilustrativa metáfora y no llega a encajar con la realidad historiográfica según se profundiza en la investigación. Este trabajo plantea las bases para una periodización más coherente de la historia contemporánea de las mujeres y los movimientos feministas.
Most of the works published in recent decades on the history of women and feminism base their route on “the waves of feminism”, a term born in 1968 when a renewed activism claimed rights and equality after years of withdrawal and expiration of the achieved so far. The new women of the 70s sought the heritage of the suffragettes, but staging a marked distance. The surge to describe the different processes of feminism in history has become so canonical that it is no longer recognized as an illustrative metaphor and does not fit in with the historiographical reality as the investigation deepens. This work lays the groundwork for a more coherent periodization of the contemporary history of women and feminist movements.
Most of the works published in recent decades on the history of women and feminism base their route on “the waves of feminism”, a term born in 1968 when a renewed activism claimed rights and equality after years of withdrawal and expiration of the achieved so far. The new women of the 70s sought the heritage of the suffragettes, but staging a marked distance. The surge to describe the different processes of feminism in history has become so canonical that it is no longer recognized as an illustrative metaphor and does not fit in with the historiographical reality as the investigation deepens. This work lays the groundwork for a more coherent periodization of the contemporary history of women and feminist movements.