Feminists and Flourbombs
First shown on Channel 4 on 13 January 2002
The Channel 4 documentary,
Feminists and FlourBombs, looks at the lives of five
women who protested at the 1970 Miss World
competition.
In Britain in the
1970s, women were beginning to organise on a national scale for the first
time. They had high hopes that they would change the way they lived and
worked. Pressure to gain equality in the workplace was coupled with attempts
at ways of living that challenged the nuclear family in which they were
relegated to the kitchen.
The Miss World competition,
where women were judged purely according to their looks, was a natural
target for their protest. They discovered more powerful enemies, though,
when they came up against male-dominated state institutions, including
the courts.
Through the eyes of
five women who participated in the protest, we can trace the history
of feminist thought and action since then. Many of the attitudes that
prevailed in 1970 have changed irrevocably, yet equality for the sexes
remains an elusive goal.
In our special
essay, former editor of Spare Rib, Sue O'Sullivan, describes the discussions,
debates and battles that made Women's Liberation such a vibrant movement.
Credits
Produced to accompany
Feminists and Flour Bombs, a Philippa Walker Productions production,
first screened on Channel 4 in 2002.
Writer: Paula
Hawkins
Editorial consultant: Julia Bard
Deputy Editor: Roger Evans
Design: édition
Resources: Nicole Carman, Jackie Wills and Roy Wallace
Editorial assistant: Jill Crouch
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A
life-changing event
The
1970s
Then
and now
Miss
World
The
protesters
Find
out more
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