Based on qualitative interviews conducted with local guilds, charities and community groups in England, this article highlights the public service older women provide for their communities by volunteering their labour to local textile craft groups. Driven by an ethics of care, they make up for a lack of services formerly provided by the welfare state, such as public transport and mental health support. We mobilise existing literature on ‘quiet activism’ to argue that their community work constitutes a form of political activism, albeit one that stops short of overtly challenging the political system. While highlighting the ways in which older women quietly go about helping their communities, we argue that by being ‘louder’ about the public ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Intellect via the DOI in...
This article examines the output and practices of two London-based feminist printing collectives tha...
Is Craftivism really activist? And what are the woolly threads that unravel the argument? Many are s...
This article advocates an enlarged understanding of the benefits of manual creativity for critical t...
This article contributes to debates about the expanded, and expanding, nature of crafts by exploring...
While social policy and planning documents are replete with ominous warnings about the cost of an ag...
Over the last two years my colleagues and I conducted research conversations with older women living...
This article is part of a special issue on textiles and intersecting identities. The article was dev...
While social policy and planning documents are replete with ominous warnings about the cost of an ag...
In this interview Sheila Rowbotham talks to Jo Littler about her involvement in feminism and politic...
Over the past 20 years, small-scale citizen action movements have become an integral part of the soc...
This research emerged from the author’s own need to identify and make visible the various activist p...
A so-called “resurgence” of feminist activism in the UK is currently being reported by journalists, ...
The subject of older women in politics has rarely been investigated and very little is thus known ab...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The main focus of the project was on the development...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Intellect via the DOI in...
This article examines the output and practices of two London-based feminist printing collectives tha...
Is Craftivism really activist? And what are the woolly threads that unravel the argument? Many are s...
This article advocates an enlarged understanding of the benefits of manual creativity for critical t...
This article contributes to debates about the expanded, and expanding, nature of crafts by exploring...
While social policy and planning documents are replete with ominous warnings about the cost of an ag...
Over the last two years my colleagues and I conducted research conversations with older women living...
This article is part of a special issue on textiles and intersecting identities. The article was dev...
While social policy and planning documents are replete with ominous warnings about the cost of an ag...
In this interview Sheila Rowbotham talks to Jo Littler about her involvement in feminism and politic...
Over the past 20 years, small-scale citizen action movements have become an integral part of the soc...
This research emerged from the author’s own need to identify and make visible the various activist p...
A so-called “resurgence” of feminist activism in the UK is currently being reported by journalists, ...
The subject of older women in politics has rarely been investigated and very little is thus known ab...
<p>Abstract copyright data collection owner.</p>The main focus of the project was on the development...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Intellect via the DOI in...
This article examines the output and practices of two London-based feminist printing collectives tha...
Is Craftivism really activist? And what are the woolly threads that unravel the argument? Many are s...