Abstrakt: |
This article examines how the emergence of new subaltern subjects, imbued with revolutionary ideals like anti-colonialism and anti-imperialism, within the framework of the second wave of feminism, deepened the breach in the monolithic, homogenising model of femaleness constructed around a base with deeply Eurocentric roots. Tricontinental magazine, a groundbreaking publication in the dissemination of new feminist realities associated with the alternative experiences of women in Asia, Africa and Latin America, provided a space for the women of the Global South to raise their voices and demand new divergent identities and discourses. The visibility of female authors and the recognition of the many women's organisations that joined forces with Tricontinental magazine brings to light a new account of anti-colonial, anti-imperialist feminisms as movements of social transformation in the context of the Global South. Although the alter-globalisation narratives contained in numerous manifestos, testimonies and publications authored by a plethora of women have received little or no recognition in the feminist historiography to date, they represent a complex pioneering framework that served as a platform for transnational cultural exchange in the context of the ideological and political polarisation of the Cold War. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR] |