We decided to take a look back and collect all those posts and put them in one post below. We always try our best to get as much representation as we can. Unfortunately, even as we scoured our database for all the posts so far in — these were all the ones we found. If you really care about the band that you love — then send us information! No matter how big or small — we put everyone up. Everyone gets a fair shot. Please HELP us!

The First Show


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This started to change from the s, when books on gender theory were translated into Chinese and saw its first "wave" of feminist scholarship. Feminism remained within academic borders for the next few decades. Then in the s it gained momentum at a social level. Women started to acquire a voice, and stories began to appear about guerrilla feminism, so to speak — women spontaneously taking action to highlight a certain cause. For example, in the summer of two women draped in black robes took to the Shanghai subway in protest. In recent years, these stories are becoming more frequent and are very encouraging.
Carving Out a Voice
I t is In a cafe in Wimbledon, south London, three young Asian men are deep in conversation. The Conservative victory of a few months earlier has left them dejected; the anti-Nazi demonstrations, the involvement with Rock Against Racism, the rallies against the National Front — none of it prevented the Tories from getting in. This is not a good time to be Asian, and things are, the men fear, about to get much worse.
Women have made significant contributions to punk rock music and its subculture since its inception in the s. This participation played a role in the historical development of punk music, especially in the U. Rock historian Helen Reddington wrote that the popular image of young punk women musicians as focused on the fashion aspects of the scene fishnet stockings , spiky blond hair, etc. She states that many, if not all women punks were more interested in the ideology and socio-political implications, rather than the fashion. Johnny Rotten wrote that "During the Pistols era, women were out there playing with the men, taking us on in equal terms Sonic Youth 's Kim Gordon states, "I think women are natural anarchists, because you're always operating in a male framework. So, no, we got no respect anywhere we went. People just didn't want us around. Musicologist Caroline Polk O'Meara has written that female experience, feminism and taking a pro-woman stance empowered women's participation in punk rock beginning in the s.