

The subtitle of the book puts it, tell 'The Lost Radical History ofĪmerica's First Feminists'. Helen LaKelly Hunt, in And the Spirit Moved Them, sets out to, as

Readers and writers can learn from each other, and that a generous I want to write this review in that spirit, with an assumption that Work about this book, as long as you promise to stay open to what does To a certainĭegree, our entire future may depend on learning to listen, listen

To tear down the ideas of others and uplift our own. We are socialized to see what is wrong, missing, off, Nature is actually very hard work in our modern culture ofĭeconstruction.

Staying focused on our foundational miraculous I am open to critiques of course, if they are offered in the spirit ofĬollective liberation. In the introduction to her book, brown presents a preferred mode ofĬritique, one that speaks to a spirit of 'calling in' rather Organising, in the past and present, that makes this hope concrete. Liberatory, feminist hope and, in their best moments, both show ways of Yet one thingĬonnects them: Hunt's and brown's books are both texts of Interviews, guidelines, and blog posts, to name a few. Nineteenth-century United States brown's book is a contemporaryĬollection of her writings on social change, taking the form of poetry, Inseparable-histories of abolitionism and feminism in the Hunt's book is a chronological account of the intertwined-indeed, New York: Feminist Press, 2017 248pp ISBN 9781558614291Īt first glance, And the Spirit Moved Them (Helen LaKelly Hunt) andĮmergent Strategy (adrienne maree brown) could not be more different. Helen LaKelly Hunt, And the Spirit Moved Them: The Lost Radical Retrieved from Īdrienne maree brown, Emergent Strategy: Shaping Change, ChangingĬhico, CA: AK Press, 2017 280pp ISBN 9781849352604
