The "Texas Women : A Celebration of History" exhibit : second-wave feminism, historical memory, and the birth of a "Texas women's history industry"

Touring the state in the early 1980s, the “Texas Women: A Celebration of History” exhibit was the first attempt to create a comprehensive, public Texas women’s history narrative. Surprisingly, the exhibit was organized not by academics or museum professionals, but rather by the Texas Foundation for...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Abbott, Gretchen Voter
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-12-2050
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-ETD-UT-2010-12-20502015-09-20T16:57:44ZThe "Texas Women : A Celebration of History" exhibit : second-wave feminism, historical memory, and the birth of a "Texas women's history industry"Abbott, Gretchen VoterSecond-wave feminismFeminist activismTexasHistorical memoryTexas womenAnn RichardsTexas Foundation for Women's ResourcesMuseumsWomen's historyTexas women's historyTouring the state in the early 1980s, the “Texas Women: A Celebration of History” exhibit was the first attempt to create a comprehensive, public Texas women’s history narrative. Surprisingly, the exhibit was organized not by academics or museum professionals, but rather by the Texas Foundation for Women’s Resources—a nascent second-wave feminist non-profit organization composed of up-and-coming political activists such as Ann Richards, Sarah Weddington, Jane Hickie, and Martha Smiley. Through an analysis of the exhibit, as well as archival research and oral histories with many of the participants, this thesis explores the reasons that a feminist organization with finite resources would choose to focus on the production of women’s history as a tool of feminist activism. The “Texas Women” exhibit was a uniquely effective way for the members of the Texas Foundation for Women’s Resources to express their feminist values in a culturally palatable way and to create embodied moments of feminist consciousness for their audience. Furthermore, it paved the way for the organization’s future successful feminist projects, fed the production of Texas women’s history initiatives around the state, and served as a springboard that helped launch Ann Richards’ successful political career.text2011-02-16T21:59:03Z2011-02-16T21:59:11Z2011-02-16T21:59:03Z2011-02-16T21:59:11Z2010-122011-02-16December 20102011-02-16T21:59:11Zthesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-12-2050eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Second-wave feminism
Feminist activism
Texas
Historical memory
Texas women
Ann Richards
Texas Foundation for Women's Resources
Museums
Women's history
Texas women's history
spellingShingle Second-wave feminism
Feminist activism
Texas
Historical memory
Texas women
Ann Richards
Texas Foundation for Women's Resources
Museums
Women's history
Texas women's history
Abbott, Gretchen Voter
The "Texas Women : A Celebration of History" exhibit : second-wave feminism, historical memory, and the birth of a "Texas women's history industry"
description Touring the state in the early 1980s, the “Texas Women: A Celebration of History” exhibit was the first attempt to create a comprehensive, public Texas women’s history narrative. Surprisingly, the exhibit was organized not by academics or museum professionals, but rather by the Texas Foundation for Women’s Resources—a nascent second-wave feminist non-profit organization composed of up-and-coming political activists such as Ann Richards, Sarah Weddington, Jane Hickie, and Martha Smiley. Through an analysis of the exhibit, as well as archival research and oral histories with many of the participants, this thesis explores the reasons that a feminist organization with finite resources would choose to focus on the production of women’s history as a tool of feminist activism. The “Texas Women” exhibit was a uniquely effective way for the members of the Texas Foundation for Women’s Resources to express their feminist values in a culturally palatable way and to create embodied moments of feminist consciousness for their audience. Furthermore, it paved the way for the organization’s future successful feminist projects, fed the production of Texas women’s history initiatives around the state, and served as a springboard that helped launch Ann Richards’ successful political career. === text
author Abbott, Gretchen Voter
author_facet Abbott, Gretchen Voter
author_sort Abbott, Gretchen Voter
title The "Texas Women : A Celebration of History" exhibit : second-wave feminism, historical memory, and the birth of a "Texas women's history industry"
title_short The "Texas Women : A Celebration of History" exhibit : second-wave feminism, historical memory, and the birth of a "Texas women's history industry"
title_full The "Texas Women : A Celebration of History" exhibit : second-wave feminism, historical memory, and the birth of a "Texas women's history industry"
title_fullStr The "Texas Women : A Celebration of History" exhibit : second-wave feminism, historical memory, and the birth of a "Texas women's history industry"
title_full_unstemmed The "Texas Women : A Celebration of History" exhibit : second-wave feminism, historical memory, and the birth of a "Texas women's history industry"
title_sort "texas women : a celebration of history" exhibit : second-wave feminism, historical memory, and the birth of a "texas women's history industry"
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/ETD-UT-2010-12-2050
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