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Articles about the CWLU
Browse articles about the CWLU and its members written from a modern perspective. If you would like to write an article that looks back at the Chicago Women's Liberation Union please contact us at infogal@cwluherstory.org. We would be happy to assist you.

Sisters Against the System

by Cara Jepson(1999) Jenny Knauss's awakening came when she taught at Mundelein College in the late 1960s. Because she was close to the age of her students—and most of the other teachers were nuns—she found herself being approached by often desperate young women in need of advice.

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Chicago was at center of feminist activities

by Angela Bonavoglia "In Chicago, we always felt the women's movement in New York thought it was the center of the world," recalls Vivian Rothstein, one of the founders of the Chicago Women's Liberation Union, a pioneering league of feminists who had been active in civil rights and anti-war efforts. "In terms of building an organization, we were first." 

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The Chicago Women’s Liberation Union: On the Cutting Edge of Protest Against Sexual Objectification

by Tim Hodgdon (2000) Tim Hodgdon was a Ph.D. candidate at the Department of History at Arizona State University when he wrote this.   

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What Was the Chicago Women's Liberation Union?
by Becky Kluchin (1999) The Chicago Women's Liberation Union (CWLU), the first women's liberation union in the country, was formed in 1969 by a group of women interested in expanding the emerging women's movement in Chicago. These women were not alone in their efforts; radical feminist groups sprang up across the country around the same time with a similar mission of establishing a national movement similar to that of civil rights and the anti-war campaigns.
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The Chicago Women's Liberation Union: An Introduction

by Margaret "Peg" Strobel and Sue Davenport (1999) The Chicago Women's Liberation Union (CWLU, 1969-1977), an early women's liberation group, organized around women's health and reproductive rights, education, economic rights, visual arts and music, sports, lesbian liberation and opposition to the war in Southeast Asia.

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From Women Who Broke the Silence

Women are not inherently passive or peaceful. We're not inherently anything but human.

Robin Morgan