Irish Left Archive

@ila@leftarchive.ie
  • Posts
  • Followers 1021
  • Following 415
  • Follow

Digital collection of political material from the Irish Left.

#Ireland #Politics #History #Activism #IrishLeftArchive #SnapshotsOfPoliticalAction

Irish Left Archive's avatar
Irish Left Archive
  • permalink
  • 2 months ago
@ila@leftarchive.ie
  • 2 shares
  • 1 reply
  • Interact

On International Women's Day #IWD2025, here are some of the publications from feminist Irish groups in our collection.

First up, Fownes Street Journal, which was produced between 1972 and '74 by the Women's Liberation Movement.

https://www.leftarchive.ie/document/2461/

The short-lived but influential Irish Women's Liberation Movement is known for events such as the Contraception Train and an appearance on The Late Late Show that reportedly descended into a shouting match with Garret FitzGerald of Fine Gael. It was renamed Women's Liberation Movement in 1972, though members also formed other groups at that time.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_Women%27s_Liberation_Movement

1/

Fownes Street Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2 (1972) — Women's Liberation Movement

Irish Left Archive

The front cover of Fownes Street Journal, Vol. 1, No. 2. It is a bright yellow page with black text reading Fownes Street Journal, Women's Liberation Movement. A logo at the centre consists of the common gender symbol for women (♀) with an equals within the circle.
Shares
@piraat@mastodon.social @aonrud@mastodon.ie
Irish Left Archive's avatar
Irish Left Archive
  • permalink
  • 2 months ago
@ila@leftarchive.ie
  • 2 likes
  • 6 shares
  • 1 reply
  • Interact

In reply to this post

Irishwomen United, founded in 1975, produced a journal called Banshee from 1975-77.

The back cover reproduced the group's charter, shown in this image. It is notable for an explicit demand for free, legal abortion and contraception (which was then available only with a prescription).

https://www.leftarchive.ie/publication/1893/

2/

Banshee

Irish Left Archive

Front cover of Banshee, Vol. 1, No. 2. The masthead in red reads: Banshee, journal of Irishwomen United, with the gender symbol for female (♀) shown in black.  The rest of the cover has a black and red drawing of a group of women, one of whom's raised clenched fist is encircled by the aforementioned symbol.
A scan of the back cover of Banshee with the text of the Irishwomen United charter.
Irish Left Archive's avatar
Irish Left Archive
  • permalink
  • 2 months ago
@ila@leftarchive.ie
  • 1 reply
  • Interact

In reply to this post

Moving North, we have one copy of Women's Action, produced by the Belfast Women's Collective.

BWC emerged from the Socialist Women’s Group in 1977 which in turn had left the Northern Ireland Women’s Rights Movement (NIWRM).

A useful quote indicates the tensions among feminist groups in the North at that time:

Because we regarded ourselves in opposition to the British we were labelled as republican by those women’s groups who didn’t actively oppose it [the NIWRM] at the same time because we were highly critical of the Republican Movement we were labelled as a bourgeois women’s group by that section of the movement [WAI], we couldn’t win either way.

(Quoted in Loughran, C., 1986. Armagh and Feminist Strategy: Campaigns around Republican Women Prisoners in Armagh Jail. Feminist Review, (23), pp.59–79. https://doi.org/10.2307/1394720.)

https://www.leftarchive.ie/document/629/

3/

Women's Action, Vol. 2, No. 3 (1978) — Belfast Women's Collective

Irish Left Archive

Front cover of Women's Action, Vol. 2, No. 3. The masthead includes an image of a woman in chains with the text: Women's Action, Belfast Women's Collective
Irish Left Archive's avatar
Irish Left Archive
  • permalink
  • 2 months ago
@ila@leftarchive.ie
  • Interact

In reply to this post

Finally, we have several copies of Women's View, which was produced throughout the 1980s by the National Women's Committee of Sinn Féin The Workers’ Party (later The Workers’ Party).

https://www.leftarchive.ie/publication/1559/

4/4

Women's View

Irish Left Archive

Irish Left Archive

The Irish Left Archive is an online archive of materials relating to Irish left politics, freely accessible and easy to download and reproduce.

Irish Left Archive
Home About Left Timeline Documents Organisations Publications People Subject Headings

 Irish Left Archive Podcast

Irish Left Archive Podcast

Exploring Left politics in Ireland past and present

Listen and subscribe

Snapshots of Political Action

A project from Irish Election Literature and the Irish Left Archive

Demonstrations Collections A protest march

Irish Left Archive homepage

About the Irish Left Archive

In 2007 the Cedar Lounge Revolution  decided to initiate and host the Irish Left Online Document Archive. This was intended to be an online archive of materials relating to the Irish left with documents, leaflets, pamphlets, posters and newspapers from the latter half of the 20th century placed online in PDF format, freely accessible and easy to download for those who are interested…

Read more

@ila@leftarchive.ie

This site is built using Microblog.pub , a single-user ActivityPub microblog.

You can follow @ila@leftarchive.ie from any Fediverse account, such as Mastodon, Pixelfed, Peertube etc.

View the code for this website