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Text Memoirs

CWLU office Our text memoirs come from a variety of sources. Some are reproduced from previously published material. Some are transcripts of speeches. Some are written specifically for this section. Others are developed from interviews conducted by researchers and journalists.

If you were involved with the Chicago Women's Liberation Union and would like to submit your memoir, please contact us.It doesn't have to be long. It doesn't have to short. It doesn't have to win the Nobel Prize for Literature. It just has to be true to you and your life in the women's movement.



A Celebration of My Life Print E-mail

by Betsy from Womankind (1972) — I guess you'd have to understand where I've been to appreciate fully where I am now, because in many ways the New Me is not remarkable at all.

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And then I began noticing injustices all over the place..... Print E-mail

by an anonymous CWLU member (1973) ♦ Why one woman from a Southwest Side Chicago Catholic upbringing joined the women's liberation movement at her community college.

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As a Feminist, This 'Jane' Was Far From Plain Print E-mail

by Chris Lombardi and Ruth Surgal (2002) One afternoon in 1969, I turned on the radio in my Chicago home and heard Studs Terkel interviewing Marlene Dixon and Nancy Stokely, two professors who had been fired from the University of Chicago for their work with the women's movement.

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Breaking With Invisibility Print E-mail

by Cady (1985) — This paper is being written in response to the on-going oppression I feel and observe within the visible white women’s movement which has been "struggling with these "issues for at least the last 11 years.

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Cleaning Up Print E-mail

By  "Mary Blake" from Womankind (1972) — I don’t know if I could get my job today -- I took my civil service exam and passed, but most people today are on patronage. But my main gripe is that we women get paid so much less. Men and women here do mostly the same work - the men don’t even do it as well - and the men still get paid more.

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Close Encounters with the Chicago Women's Liberation Union Print E-mail

by Bob Simpson (2001)

It was an unusual agenda item, even for one of our commune’s house meetings. Usually house meetings discussed items like dirty dishes, leaving peoples’ vinyl LP’s out of their cases, or why someone had bought 6 bags of pinto beans when everyone was sick of them.

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CWLU Work Groups and Personal Transformation Print E-mail

by Sue Davenport, Paula Kamen and the CWLU Herstory Committee — CWLU workgroups were the independent committees of the Union organized around particular interests and activities.

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Days of Celebration and Resistance: The Chicago Women's Liberation Rock Band, 1970-1973 Print E-mail

by Naomi Weisstein (1996) — In Chicago, one cold and sunny day in March of 1970, I decided to organize a feminist rock band. I was lying on the sofa listening to the radio -- a rare bit of free time in those early days of the women's movement. Perhaps a meeting had been canceled.

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Founding and Sustaining a Women's Studies Program Print E-mail

by Judith Kegan Gardiner (1999) — The UIC Women's Studies Program (WSP) has its roots in the Women's Liberation Movement of the late 1960s and early '70s and in other political movements of that period. I arrived on campus as an assistant professor of English in 1969 and report these events not as an observer but as a participant who helped found the Program and who remains committed to its future.

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Going Through Changes Print E-mail

by Joan from Womankind (1971) — I remember when I first thought about whether Women's Liberation was relevant to me. I decided against it. My good (male) friend had gently hinted that this Women’s Liberation thing was attracting quite a few of the "cool" girls at school and maybe I should look into it.

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Growing Up Female Print E-mail

by an anonymous CWLU member (Mid 1970's) — My mother got divorced when I was still in the crib. That was a heavy thing, back then in the 50's, especially because we lived in a Catholic neighborhood. I grew up with just her and me.

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From Women Who Broke the Silence

I think it's about time we voted for senators with breasts.  After all, we've been voting for boobs long enough.

Clarie Sargent