Ann Hunter Popkin Explained

Ann Hunter Popkin
Birth Date:1945
Education:Radcliffe College
Brandeis University
Occupation:Teacher, activist

Ann Hunter Popkin (born 1945) is a long-time social justice and women's movement activist. As a northern college student she traveled to Mississippi to participate in Freedom Summer in 1964.[1] She was a founding member of Bread and Roses, a women's liberation organization in Cambridge, Massachusetts, in 1969, and produced the first scholarly study of its appeal and impact.[2] [3] A photographer, film-maker, teacher, and counselor, Popkin has worked in a variety of university and community settings.

Popkin graduated from Radcliffe College in 1967 and also attended Brandeis University from 1968 to 1977 where she earned a Ph.D. in Sociology.[4]

Early Movement Activism

Working alongside northern and southern black and white students doing voter registration canvassing and community work in Vicksburg, Mississippi in the summer of 1964 was a powerful experience that shaped Popkin's life-long commitment to social justice and anti-racism.[5] She participated in the anti-war movement, working in 1967 as a researcher for Professor Noam Chomsky analyzing American press coverage of the Vietnam War. In 1969, she joined other women who began to expand the analysis of race and class inequality to challenge widely accepted ideas about gender inequality and to envision women's liberation. As a founding member of Bread and Roses, Popkin took part in its various collective activities, including participating in consciousness raising as well as protests exposing and criticizing sexism, and marching as part of women's contingents at anti-war and civil rights protests and demonstrations. Into the mid 1970s,[6] Being part of women's liberation was another formative and continuing influence on Popkin's life and work.[7] She taught courses on the women's movement at a Boston-area Women's School, and was also active in the New England Marxist-Feminist Study Group and the Boston Women's Union.

University and Community Teaching and Anti-Racist Work

Starting in 1973, Popkin taught courses on the Sociology of Men and Women, Social Movements, Media and Society, and Unlearning Racism and Sexism at the University of Massachusetts at Boston, the University of California at Santa Cruz, the University of Oregon, where she was the acting director of women's studies, and at Oregon State, where she was the Acting Director of the Differences, Power and Discrimination Program. In 2003 Popkin received a Women of Achievement Award from Oregon State.[8] Beginning in 1983, Popkin also served as a leader and facilitator for community-based Unlearning Racism and Sexism Workshops in the Bay Area, California and in Eugene, Oregon. She currently leads Compassionate Listening Training and Practice Groups in Portland, Oregon.

Scholarship and Publications

Photography and Film

Ann Popkin's photographs have been published in various editions of Our Bodies, Ourselves between 1972 and 1998, Ourselves and Our Children, 1978, and in the Boston Globe Sunday magazine, 1973.

Her documentary films include "Grandma," the life of an older woman as working wife and mother, 16mm, black and white, and Charm School, one aspect of female socialization, Super 8mm, color.

External links

Notes and References

  1. Poinsett. Alexander. September 1964. Crusade in Mississippi. Ebony. 19. 11 (page 25-36).
  2. Book: Popkin, Ann. "The Personal is Political: The Women's Liberation Movement" in They Should Have Served That Cup of Coffee, edited by Dick Cluster. South End Press. 1979. Boston, MA. 181–222.
  3. Book: Popkin, Ann. "Bread and Roses: An Early Movement in the Development of Socialist-Feminism," PhD Dissertation, Sociology, Brandeis University. 1978.
  4. Web site: Popkin, Ann Hunter. Papers, 1968-1977: A Finding Aid. Harvard University Library. 2014-03-03. https://web.archive.org/web/20140303215920/http://oasis.lib.harvard.edu/oasis/deliver/~sch00293. 2014-03-03. dead.
  5. Book: Olson, Lynne. Freedom's Daughters: The Unsung Heroines of the Civil Rights Movement from 1830-1970. Scribner's. 2001. New York. 354.
  6. Book: Cluster, Dick. They Should Have Served That Cup of Coffee. South End. 1979. Boston. 181–222.
  7. Book: Morrison, Joan and Robert K. From Camelot to Kent State: The Sixties Experience in the Words of Those Who Lived It. 1987. New York. 181–185.
  8. Book: Evans, Sarah. Tidal Wave: How Women Changed America at Century's End. March 2, 2004. Free Press.