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Mary Daly

A Wisdom Archive on Mary Daly

Mary Daly

A selection of articles related to Mary Daly

We recommend this article: Mary Daly - 1, and also this: Mary Daly - 2.
Mary Daly

ARTICLES RELATED TO Mary Daly

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Effects of feminism in the West

Some feminists would argue that there is still much to be done on these fronts, while others would disagree and claim that the battle has basically been won. Feminism - Effects on civil rights. Feminism has effected many changes in Western society, including women's suffrage; broad employment for women at more equitable wages; the right to initiate divorce proceedings and the introduction of "no fault" divorce; the right to keep children from their fathers, the right to obtain contraception and safe aborti ...

See also:

Feminism, Feminism - Origins, Feminism - Feminism in many forms, Feminism - Subtypes of feminism, Feminism - Relationship to other movements, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the West, Feminism - Effects on civil rights, Feminism - Effect on language, Feminism - Effect on heterosexual relationships, Feminism - Effect on religion, Feminism - Effect on moral education, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the East, Feminism - Worldwide statistics, Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement, Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism, Feminism - Famous feminists, Feminism - Books

Read more here: » Feminism: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Effects of feminism in the West

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - List of feminists - Third-wave feminists

See also: Third-wave feminism ...

See also:

List of feminists, List of feminists - Early pioneers, List of feminists - First-wave feminists, List of feminists - Second-wave feminists, List of feminists - Third-wave feminists, List of feminists - Ecofeminists, List of feminists - Dissident feminists, List of feminists - Anarcha-Feminists, List of feminists - French feminists, List of feminists - Lesbian feminists, List of feminists - Muslim Feminists, List of feminists - Latina Feminists, List of feminists - Other feminists

Read more here: » List of feminists: Encyclopedia II - List of feminists - Third-wave feminists

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - List of Boston College people - Notable Boston College alumni

Image:Cellucci portrait.jpg List of Boston College people - Arts and literature. Robert Ambrose, Music Director and Conductor, Atlanta Wind Symphony Margaret Badenhausen, 1966, painter/printmaker James Balog, 1974, photographer Peter Dee, 1961, playwright Larry Deyab, 1979, painter Brendan Galvin, 1960, poet George V. Higgins, 1961, JD 1967, novelist Charles Hogan, 1989, novelist/screenwriter Jack Kerouac, x1943, poet Na ...

See also:

List of Boston College people, List of Boston College people - Notable Boston College alumni, List of Boston College people - Arts and literature, List of Boston College people - Business, List of Boston College people - Education, List of Boston College people - Entertainment, List of Boston College people - Law politics and public service, List of Boston College people - Media and communication, List of Boston College people - Religion, List of Boston College people - Science technology and medicine, List of Boston College people - Sports, List of Boston College people - Notable Boston College faculty, List of Boston College people - Chemistry, List of Boston College people - Economics, List of Boston College people - English, List of Boston College people - Finance, List of Boston College people - History, List of Boston College people - Philosophy, List of Boston College people - Political science, List of Boston College people - Sociology, List of Boston College people - Theology

Read more here: » List of Boston College people: Encyclopedia II - List of Boston College people - Notable Boston College alumni

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - List of Boston College people - Notable Boston College alumni

List of Boston College people - Arts and literature. Robert Ambrose, Music Director and Conductor, Atlanta Wind Symphony Margaret Badenhausen, 1966, painter/printmaker James Balog, 1974, photographer Peter Dee, 1961, playwright Larry Deyab, 1979, painter Brendan Galvin, 1960, poet George V. Higgins, 1961, JD 1967, novelist Charles Hogan, 1989, novelist/screenwriter Jack Kerouac, x1943, poet Natalia Majluf, 1988, curator, Museo ...

See also:

List of Boston College people, List of Boston College people - Notable Boston College alumni, List of Boston College people - Arts and literature, List of Boston College people - Business, List of Boston College people - Education, List of Boston College people - Entertainment, List of Boston College people - Law politics and public service, List of Boston College people - Media and communication, List of Boston College people - Religion, List of Boston College people - Science technology and medicine, List of Boston College people - Sports, List of Boston College people - Notable Boston College faculty, List of Boston College people - Chemistry, List of Boston College people - Economics, List of Boston College people - English, List of Boston College people - Finance, List of Boston College people - History, List of Boston College people - Philosophy, List of Boston College people - Political science, List of Boston College people - Sociology, List of Boston College people - Theology

Read more here: » List of Boston College people: Encyclopedia II - List of Boston College people - Notable Boston College alumni

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - KKK replacing C or K

The most common usage of the letters "kkk" in alternative political spelling is the spelling of "America" as Amerikkka. A reference to the Ku Klux Klan, this is often done to indicate the belief that the United States or American society is fundamentally racist, oppressive and corrupt. The earliest known usage of "Amerikkka" recorded in the Oxford English Dictionary (OED) is in 1970, in a journal called Black World. Presumably, this was an extrapolation from the then already widespread "Amerika". The spelling "Amerikkka" came into greater use after the 1990 relea ...

See also:

Alternative political spelling, Alternative political spelling - K replacing C, Alternative political spelling - KKK replacing C or K, Alternative political spelling - $ replacing S; € replacing E; £ replacing L, Alternative political spelling - Swastika replacing S, Alternative political spelling - @ replacing A and/or O, Alternative political spelling - * replacing O and A or I and E, Alternative political spelling - Hidden puns, Alternative political spelling - Additional examples

Read more here: » Alternative political spelling: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - KKK replacing C or K

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Origins

Feminism as a philosophy and movement in the modern sense may be usefully dated to The Enlightenment with such thinkers as Lady Mary Wortley Montagu and the Marquis de Condorcet championing women's education. The first scientific society for women was founded in Middelburg, a city in the south of the Dutch republic, in 1785. Journals for women which focused on issues like science became popular during this period as well. Mary Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Woman (1792) is one of the first works that c ...

See also:

Feminism, Feminism - Origins, Feminism - Feminism in many forms, Feminism - Subtypes of feminism, Feminism - Relationship to other movements, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the West, Feminism - Effects on civil rights, Feminism - Effect on language, Feminism - Effect on heterosexual relationships, Feminism - Effect on religion, Feminism - Effect on moral education, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the East, Feminism - Worldwide statistics, Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement, Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism, Feminism - Famous feminists, Feminism - Books

Read more here: » Feminism: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Origins

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian

See also: Terminology of homosexuality The word lesbian originally referred to an inhabitant of Lesbos, a Greek island located in the East Aegean Sea where the ancient Greek lyric poet Sappho lived in the 6th century BC. Many of her poems are about love between women, although the precise details of Sappho's sexuality are unknown — some ancient accounts describe her as having love affairs with men as well; while one ancient source, Maximus of Tyre, claimed that her relationships with women were purely platonic. In any ...

See also:

Lesbian, Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian, Lesbian - Public policy, Lesbian - Reproduction and parenting rights, Lesbian - Sexuality, Lesbian - Culture, Lesbian - Media depictions, Lesbian - Mainstream broadcast media, Lesbian - Cinema, Lesbian - Feminism, Lesbian - Transwomen and trans-inclusion, Lesbian - Magazines, Lesbian - Media depictions

Read more here: » Lesbian: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Public policy

In Western societies, explicit prohibitions on women's homosexual behavior have been markedly weaker than those on men's homosexual behavior. In the United Kingdom, lesbianism has never been illegal. Male homosexuality, however, which was criminalised in the late 19th century, occasionally produced a prison sentence and was only legalised in England and Wales in 1967. There are various apocryphal stories about why lesbianism was not criminalised in the UK. One relates that Queen Victoria refused to sign a bill outlawing it, insisting, "ladies did not do such things." However, lesbian publications such as The Well of Lonelin ...

See also:

Lesbian, Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian, Lesbian - Public policy, Lesbian - Reproduction and parenting rights, Lesbian - Sexuality, Lesbian - Culture, Lesbian - Media depictions, Lesbian - Mainstream broadcast media, Lesbian - Cinema, Lesbian - Feminism, Lesbian - Transwomen and trans-inclusion, Lesbian - Magazines, Lesbian - Media depictions

Read more here: » Lesbian: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Public policy

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Sexuality

Sexual activity between women is as diverse as sex between heterosexuals or gay men. Some women in lesbian relationships do not identify as lesbian, but as bisexual. As with any interpersonal activity, sexual expression depends on the context of the relationship. Like anyone else (regardless of sexuality), lesbians can be promiscuous or committed, ashamed or proud. There is a wide spectrum of lesbian behavior and generalizations can be misleading. Recent cultural changes in western and a few other societies have enabled lesbians to express t ...

See also:

Lesbian, Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian, Lesbian - Public policy, Lesbian - Reproduction and parenting rights, Lesbian - Sexuality, Lesbian - Culture, Lesbian - Media depictions, Lesbian - Mainstream broadcast media, Lesbian - Cinema, Lesbian - Feminism, Lesbian - Transwomen and trans-inclusion, Lesbian - Magazines, Lesbian - Media depictions

Read more here: » Lesbian: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Sexuality

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Culture

Throughout history, hundreds of lesbians have been well-known figures in the arts and culture. (See List of gay, lesbian or bisexual people.) Before the influence of European sexology emerged at the turn of the twentieth-century, in cultural terms female homosexuality remained almost invisible as compared to male homosexuality, which was subject to the law and thus more regulated and reported by the press. However with the publication of works by sexologists like Karl Heinrich Ulrichs, Richard von Krafft-Ebing, Havelock Ellis, Edward Carpenter and Magnus Hirschfeld, the concept of active female ...

See also:

Lesbian, Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian, Lesbian - Public policy, Lesbian - Reproduction and parenting rights, Lesbian - Sexuality, Lesbian - Culture, Lesbian - Media depictions, Lesbian - Mainstream broadcast media, Lesbian - Cinema, Lesbian - Feminism, Lesbian - Transwomen and trans-inclusion, Lesbian - Magazines, Lesbian - Media depictions

Read more here: » Lesbian: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Culture

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Feminism

Historically, lesbians have been involved in womens' rights. Late in the 19th Century, the term Boston marriage was used to describe romantic unions between women living together while contributing to the suffrage movement. Continuing a tradition of inclusive acceptance, in 2004 Massachusetts became the first American state to legalize same-sex marriages.[1] During the 1970s and 80s, with the emergence of modern feminism and the radical feminism movement, lesbian separatism became popular, and groups of lesbian women cam ...

See also:

Lesbian, Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian, Lesbian - Public policy, Lesbian - Reproduction and parenting rights, Lesbian - Sexuality, Lesbian - Culture, Lesbian - Media depictions, Lesbian - Mainstream broadcast media, Lesbian - Cinema, Lesbian - Feminism, Lesbian - Transwomen and trans-inclusion, Lesbian - Magazines, Lesbian - Media depictions

Read more here: » Lesbian: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Feminism

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism

Feminism, in some forms and to varying degrees, has become generally accepted in Western society. However, the attention it has attracted, due to the social changes it has effected, has resulted in many dissenting voices. Criticism has come from within the movement, from non-feminists, from masculists, from social conservatives, and from scientists. Postcolonial feminists criticise Western forms of feminism, notably radical feminism and its most basic assumption, universalization of female experience. They argue that this assumption i ...

See also:

Feminism, Feminism - Origins, Feminism - Feminism in many forms, Feminism - Subtypes of feminism, Feminism - Relationship to other movements, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the West, Feminism - Effects on civil rights, Feminism - Effect on language, Feminism - Effect on heterosexual relationships, Feminism - Effect on religion, Feminism - Effect on moral education, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the East, Feminism - Worldwide statistics, Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement, Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism, Feminism - Famous feminists, Feminism - Books

Read more here: » Feminism: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - Additional examples

The phrase public schools is occasionally altered as a commentary on the quality of the education they are providing. One alternate spelling, pubblik skoolz, hints at the lack of spelling ability in the students of said schools, as a result of their inferior education from public school teachers. Another alternative that's been spotted on the Internet but initially associated with talk radio is public screwels, which implies that poorly run schools staffed by incompetent teachers tend to "screw" st ...

See also:

Alternative political spelling, Alternative political spelling - K replacing C, Alternative political spelling - KKK replacing C or K, Alternative political spelling - $ replacing S; € replacing E; £ replacing L, Alternative political spelling - Swastika replacing S, Alternative political spelling - @ replacing A and/or O, Alternative political spelling - * replacing O and A or I and E, Alternative political spelling - Hidden puns, Alternative political spelling - Additional examples

Read more here: » Alternative political spelling: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - Additional examples

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - Swastika replacing S

During George W. Bush's trip to Argentina for the Summit of the Americas in November 2005, many protesters were seen with T-shirts and signs in which the "s" in Bush was replaced with a right-facing swastika, in the style used by the Nazis. The implication of the protesters was that that Bush is a fascist. An earlier replacement is the Sig rune as used by the Nazi SS. Basque leftist nationalists have for exampled spelled "PSOE" as PᛋᛋOE. ...

See also:

Alternative political spelling, Alternative political spelling - K replacing C, Alternative political spelling - KKK replacing C or K, Alternative political spelling - $ replacing S; € replacing E; £ replacing L, Alternative political spelling - Swastika replacing S, Alternative political spelling - @ replacing A and/or O, Alternative political spelling - * replacing O and A or I and E, Alternative political spelling - Hidden puns, Alternative political spelling - Additional examples

Read more here: » Alternative political spelling: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - Swastika replacing S

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - @ replacing A and/or O

Since at least 1980, Anarchists have used the "at sign" ("@") as a readily handy character to represent the circled letter A. This has been extended to substituting it for the letter "A" as in the Crass fanzine "Toxic Gr@fity" [33] This may have influenced the usage in Spanish and other Romance languages of this symbol as a politically correct substitute for so-called sexist language. For example, the Spanish words "amigo" and "amiga" would be replaced with amig@. The character is intended to resemble a mix of the ...

See also:

Alternative political spelling, Alternative political spelling - K replacing C, Alternative political spelling - KKK replacing C or K, Alternative political spelling - $ replacing S; € replacing E; £ replacing L, Alternative political spelling - Swastika replacing S, Alternative political spelling - @ replacing A and/or O, Alternative political spelling - * replacing O and A or I and E, Alternative political spelling - Hidden puns, Alternative political spelling - Additional examples

Read more here: » Alternative political spelling: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - @ replacing A and/or O

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - * replacing O and A or I and E

In Italian web writings (chats, forums, mailing-lists, pages, etc.) it is common to see "*" replacing the final vowels "o" and "a" or "i" and "e" (respectively masculine and feminine singular and masculine and feminine plural). Even though one could think this form lack of number, it is actually deduced from the context, so "*" (generally) replace only a pair of vowel: "amic*" instead of "amico/a" ("friend") XOR instead of "amici/amiche" ("friends"); yes, in th ...

See also:

Alternative political spelling, Alternative political spelling - K replacing C, Alternative political spelling - KKK replacing C or K, Alternative political spelling - $ replacing S; € replacing E; £ replacing L, Alternative political spelling - Swastika replacing S, Alternative political spelling - @ replacing A and/or O, Alternative political spelling - * replacing O and A or I and E, Alternative political spelling - Hidden puns, Alternative political spelling - Additional examples

Read more here: » Alternative political spelling: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - * replacing O and A or I and E

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - Hidden puns

Occasionally a word written in its orthodox spelling is altered with internal capital letters, hyphens, italics, or other devices so as to highlight a fortuitous pun. After the controversial U.S. presidential election, 2000, the alleged improprieties of the election prompted the use of such titles as pResident and (p)resident [34] [35] for George W. Bush. The same effects were also used for Bill Clinton during and after Clinton's impeachment hearings. These devices were intended to suggest that the president was merely the resident of the Whit ...

See also:

Alternative political spelling, Alternative political spelling - K replacing C, Alternative political spelling - KKK replacing C or K, Alternative political spelling - $ replacing S; € replacing E; £ replacing L, Alternative political spelling - Swastika replacing S, Alternative political spelling - @ replacing A and/or O, Alternative political spelling - * replacing O and A or I and E, Alternative political spelling - Hidden puns, Alternative political spelling - Additional examples

Read more here: » Alternative political spelling: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - Hidden puns

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - $ replacing S; € replacing E; £ replacing L

The dollar sign can be inserted in the place of the letter "S" to indicate plutocracy, greed, corruption, or the perceived immoral or unethical accumulation of money. For example: Bu$h (George W. Bush, George Herbert Walker Bush, or any member of the Bush family) [20][21], [22] E$$o (Esso or Exxon Mobil): used by the UK-based Stop Esso campaign encouraging people to boycott Esso, in protest against Esso's opposition to the Kyoto Protocol I$rael (Israel) [23] Micro$oft, M$ ...

See also:

Alternative political spelling, Alternative political spelling - K replacing C, Alternative political spelling - KKK replacing C or K, Alternative political spelling - $ replacing S; € replacing E; £ replacing L, Alternative political spelling - Swastika replacing S, Alternative political spelling - @ replacing A and/or O, Alternative political spelling - * replacing O and A or I and E, Alternative political spelling - Hidden puns, Alternative political spelling - Additional examples

Read more here: » Alternative political spelling: Encyclopedia II - Alternative political spelling - $ replacing S; € replacing E; £ replacing L

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian

See also: Terminology of homosexuality The word lesbian originally referred to an inhabitant of Lesbos, an island in Greece where an ancient Greek lyric poet named Sappho lived. Some of her poems imply love between women. Whether Sappho was a lesbian in the modern meaning of the term or a poet who described lesbians is not known. Although she did write poems about love between women, there is some dispute as to how her writings can be interpreted. Sappho's literary association with love between women led to t ...

See also:

Lesbian, Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian, Lesbian - Public policy regarding, Lesbian - Reproduction and parenting rights, Lesbian - Sexuality, Lesbian - Culture, Lesbian - Modern day, Lesbian - Media depictions, Lesbian - Mainstream broadcast media, Lesbian - Cinema, Lesbian - Feminism, Lesbian - Transwomen and trans-inclusion, Lesbian - Magazines, Lesbian - Media depictions

Read more here: » Lesbian: Encyclopedia II - Lesbian - Etymology of lesbian

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism

Feminism, in some forms and to varying degrees, has become generally accepted in Western society. However, the attention it has attracted, due to the social changes it has effected, has resulted in many dissenting voices. Criticism has come from within the movement, from masculists, and from social conservatives. Postcolonial feminists criticise Western forms of feminism, notably radical feminism and its most basic assumption, universalization of female experience. They argue that this assumption is based on the experience of white, m ...

See also:

Feminism, Feminism - Origins, Feminism - Feminism in many forms, Feminism - Subtypes of feminism, Feminism - Relationship to other movements, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the West, Feminism - Effects on civil rights, Feminism - Effect on language, Feminism - Effect on heterosexual relationships, Feminism - Effect on religion, Feminism - Effect on moral education, Feminism - Effects of feminism in the East, Feminism - Worldwide statistics, Feminism - Perspective: the nature of the modern movement, Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism, Feminism - Famous feminists, Feminism - Books

Read more here: » Feminism: Encyclopedia II - Feminism - Contemporary criticisms of feminism

Mary Daly: Encyclopedia II - Goddess - Abrahamic religions

Monotheist cultures, which recognise only one central deity, generally do characterize that deity as male, implicitly already grammatically by using masculine gender, but also explicitly by terms such as "Father" or "Lord". In all monotheist religions, however, there are mystic undercurrents which emphasize the feminine aspects of the godhead, e.g. the Collyridians in the time of early Christianity, who viewed Mary as a Goddess, the medieval visionary Julian of Norwich, the Judaic Shekinah and the Gnostic Sophia traditions, and some Sufi texts in Islam.< ...

See also:

Goddess, Goddess - Ancient Near East, Goddess - Egypt, Goddess - Mesopotamia, Goddess - Arabia, Goddess - Indo-European religion, Goddess - Hinduism, Goddess - Graeco-Roman religion, Goddess - Celtic religion, Goddess - Germanic religion, Goddess - Abrahamic religions, Goddess - Judaism, Goddess - Christianity, Goddess - Islam, Goddess - New religious movements, Goddess - Wicca and Neopaganism, Goddess - Religious feminism, Goddess - Secular use

Read more here: » Goddess: Encyclopedia II - Goddess - Abrahamic religions




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