Skip to main content

HRC

  • Home
  • About
    • Welcome
    • Definitions
  • News
  • People
    • Academics & Adjuncts
    • Associate Fellows
    • Honorary Faculty
    • Visiting Fellows
    • HRC Internal Fellows
    • Current PhD students
  • Research
    • Annual Theme
    • Fellowships
    • Public Culture Network
    • Previous Annual Themes
    • ANU Collections News
  • Events
    • Upcoming events
    • HRC Work in Progress Morning Teas
    • Distinguished Lecture Series
    • Public Lectures
    • Science Art Film
    • Cultural Conversations
    • Zooming the Future
    • Conferences
  • Study with us
    • Academic Career Development
    • Graduate Research
    • Pre-doctoral Research
    • National Graduate Student Workshops
  • History
  • Contact us

Partners

  • Australian Museums and Galleries Association (ACT Branch)
  • Australian National Centre for the Public Awareness of Science
  • Australian Studies Institute
  • ANU Collections Hub
  • Centre for Classical Studies
  • Classics Museum
  • Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes
  • Freilich Project for the Study of Bigotry
  • Gender Institute
  • Interdisciplinary and Cross-Cultural Research
  • Sydney Social Sciences and Humanities Advanced Research Centre, University of Sydney
  • The Australasian Consortium of Humanities Researchers & Centres
  • The Centre for Creative and Cultural Research, University of Canberra
  • U3A Canberra

Related Sites

  • ANU College of Arts & Social Sciences
  • Research School of Humanities and the Arts
  • Research School of Social Sciences

Administrator

Breadcrumb

HomeEvents‘The Future of Our Past’ ~ Memory Activism and The Feminist Temporalities of International Women’s Year 1975
‘The Future of Our Past’ ~ Memory Activism and the Feminist Temporalities of International Women’s Year 1975
‘The Future of Our Past’ ~ Memory Activism and the Feminist Temporalities of International Women’s Year 1975

Women's rights demonstration in Melbourne to mark International Women's Day, 8 March 1975. National Archives of Australia

Rising from the ashes of patriarchally induced historical amnesia, feminist history is now delivered to us in discontinuous ‘chunks’ of activist time or tenuously connected crests and troughs. The perception that this narrative gives us of discontinuity spurs feelings of disconnection as feminists struggle to forge links with their predecessors. It often leaves new generations of activists feeling as if they are burdened with the overwhelming task of beginning feminism anew. Yet, there is a long history of memory activism that saw feminists striving to ensure the intergenerational transmission of feminist knowledge so that younger women would be aware that they could build directly on their predecessors’ momentum to realise their feminist futures. In this paper, I carry out an analysis of feminist ‘time, place, everywhen’ by framing International Women’s Year (1975) in Australia as a crossroads where intergenerational feminist desires for historical and affective connection intersected.

Speaker: 

Sharon Crozier-De Rosa
is Professor in History at the University of Wollongong. Her research focuses on memory cultures, emotions and affect, and histories of activisms from anti-colonial to feminist to archival. She currently leads an ARC Discovery Project on gender, social movements, and cultural heritage, and books include Remembering Women’s Activism (with Vera Mackie, 2019), Shame and the Anti-Feminist Backlash: Britain, Ireland and Australia, 1890–1920 (2018), and Sources for the History of Emotions (with Katie Barclay and Peter Stearns, 2020). She is Deputy Editor of Women’s History Review and President of Irish Studies Association of Australia and New Zealand.


 

 

Date & time

  • Tue 14 May 2024, 10:15 am - 11:15 am

Location

Room E4.11, Level 4 Baldessin Precinct Building

Speakers

  • Professor Sharon Crozier-De Rosa (University of Wollongong)

Event Series

HRC Work in Progress Morning Teas

Contact

  •  Send email

File attachments

AttachmentSize
WIPS_Sharon_Crozier-De_Rosa_14-5-24.pdf(550.01 KB)550.01 KB