And Still We March: A Search for Women's Freedom


Price:
Sale price$19.99

Description

Around the world, women's rights are under attack.

In 2022, the US Supreme Court voted to overturn Roe v. Wade, restricting access to abortion across America. The decision mirrored a global trend towards a devastating unravelling of women's freedoms; a reversal of hard-won progress, and a battle that continues to be fought on both sides of the Atlantic.

Following in the footsteps of her mother fifty years before her, Marisa Bate is galvanised to journey across America, meeting the women on the ground, and telling the stories behind the headlines. Examining half a century of feminist struggle in the UK and the US, she also finds herself tracing the roots of her own family, seamlessly interweaving the personal with the political.

Lyrical, poignant, and bursting with defiant hope, And Still We March is an urgent and perceptive dissection of female autonomy, motherhood, and a woman's right to choose.

A 'beguiling feminist memoir' Lindsey Hilsum



Author: Marisa Bate
Publisher: HQ
Published: 07/08/2025
Pages: 304
Binding Type: Paperback
Weight: 0.48lbs
Size: 7.81h x 5.32w x 0.79d
ISBN13: 9780008392451
ISBN10: 0008392455
BISAC Categories:
- Biography & Autobiography | Women
- History | Women
- Social Science | Feminism & Feminist Theory

About the Author

Marisa Bate was the first member of staff at the Webby-winning 'The Pool' and has built a respected and trusted name as a feminist journalist, writing for, amongst others, the Guardian, the Times, The Telegraph, the i Paper, the Independent, Glamour, Marie Claire, Cosmopolitan, PORTER, Grazia, Stylist, Red, and Vogue.co.uk. She is the author of The Periodic Table of Feminism (Ebury, 2018), which was published in the US by Seal Press and included in Bustle's best books of the year.

Marisa is a regular commentator on feminist issues, with recent appearances across TV radio including BBC Radio 4's The World Tonight and Woman's Hour. Marisa holds an MA in Twentieth Century Literature and its Intellectual Contexts from Goldsmiths, London. Her piece about Doria Ragland, single mothers and her own mother was The Pool's highest performing piece of content ever.

You may also like

Recently viewed