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Diana E. H. Russell

Diana E. H. Russell (6 November 1938 – 28 July 2020)[1] was a feminist writer and activist.[2] Born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa, she moved to England in 1957, and then to the United States in 1961.[2] For the past 45 years she was engaged in research on sexual violence against women and girls. She wrote numerous books and articles on rape, including marital rape, femicide, incest, misogynist murders of women, and pornography. For The Secret Trauma, she was co-recipient of the 1986 C. Wright Mills Award. She was also the recipient of the 2001 Humanist Heroine Award from the American Humanist Association.[3] She was also an organizer of the First International Tribunal on Crimes against Women, in Brussels in March 1976.[4]

Diana Russell
BornDiana Elizabeth Hamilton Russell
(1938-11-06)6 November 1938
Cape Town, South Africa
Died28 July 2020(2020-07-28) (aged 81)
Berkeley, California, US
OccupationProfessor emerita, feminist, author, and activist
Alma materUniversity of Cape Town, London School of Economics, Harvard University
Period1967–2020
Literary movementWomen's rights, human rights, Anti-Apartheid Movement
Website
dianarussell.com

Early life edit

Russell was born and raised in Cape Town, South Africa, a twin and the fourth of the six children of a South African father, James Hamilton Russell, and a British mother, Kathleen Mary (née Gibson) Russell. She attended Herschel Girls' School, an Anglican boarding school for girls.[5][6] After completing her Bachelor's degree in psychology from the University of Cape Town, at the age of 19, Russell left for Britain.[2]

In Britain, she enrolled in a Post-Graduate Diploma in Social Science and Administration at the London School of Economics and Political Science. In 1961, she passed the Diploma with Distinction and also received the prize for the best student in the program.[7] She moved to the United States, in 1963 where she had been accepted into an interdisciplinary PhD program at Harvard University. Her research focused on sociology and the study of revolution.[2]

Russell's radical activism began with her involvement in the anti-apartheid movement in South Africa. In 1963, Russell had joined the Liberal Party of South Africa that had been founded by Alan Paton, the author of Cry the Beloved Country. While participating in a peaceful protest in Cape Town, Russell was arrested with other party members. She came to the conclusion that non-violent strategies were futile against the brutal violence and repression of the white Afrikaner police state. Thereafter, she joined the African Resistance Movement (ARM), an underground revolutionary movement fighting apartheid in South Africa. The principal strategy of the ARM was to bomb and sabotage government property, and though Russell was only a peripheral member of the ARM, she still risked a 10-year incarceration if caught.[2] Russell's analysis of strategies and tactics for social and political change is detailed in her book, Rebellion, Revolution, and Armed Force: A Comparative Study of Fifteen Countries with Special Emphasis on Cuba and South Africa (1974).[8]

Research and writings on rape and sexual abuse edit

Rape and other forms of men's sexual exploitation and abuse of women was one of the primary focuses of Russell's research and writings. In her book, The Politics of Rape (1975), Russell suggested that rape was a display of socially defined perceptions of masculinity instead of deviant social behavior. Her other books in this area are Rape in Marriage (1982), Sexual Exploitation: Rape, Child Sexual Abuse, and Workplace Harassment (1984). In 1986, Russell published The Secret Trauma: Incest in the Lives of Girls and Women (1986). It was one of the first scientific research studies of incestuous sexual abuse to be published. For it she received the C.Wright Mills Award in 1986. In 1993, she edited an anthology on pornography, Making Violence Sexy: Feminist Views on Pornography. Her 1994 book, Against Pornography: The Evidence of Harm, which includes 100 pornographic photos, was a study establishing how pornography encourages men to rape and leads to increased incidents of rape.

Organizing the First International Tribunal on Crimes Against Women edit

Russell lobbied other feminists for two years and eventually was successful in organizing the first International Tribunal on Crimes against Women in Brussels, Belgium, in 1976. The conference which lasted for four days, in which individual women from different countries testified to their personal experiences of various forms of violence and oppressions because of their gender, was attended by 2,000 women from 40 countries. By the second day it had dissolved into disaster, as "radical activists were storming the stage one after another in an improvised free-for-fall".[9]

Simone de Beauvoir in her introductory speech to the Tribunal said: "I salute the International Tribunal as the beginning of the radical decolonization of women." Later, Belgian feminist and journalist Nicole Van de Ven documented with Diana the event in a book, Crimes Against Women: The Proceedings of the International Tribunal (1976).

Redefining and politicizing "femicide" edit

In 1976 Russell redefined 'femicide', as "the killing of females by males because they are female." At the International Tribunal on Crimes Against Women, she testified to numerous examples of lethal forms of male violence against women and girls from different cultures around the world. Russell's intention was to politicize the term, and bring attention to the misogyny driving these lethal crimes against women, which she said gender-neutral terms like murder don’t do. Russell who was puzzled about the lack of response of women's groups in the United States to the use of the term 'femicide' continued to advocate the use of 'femicide' to women's groups in the United States and around the world. She explained that in order to deal with these extreme crimes against women, it is necessary to recognize that like race-based hate crimes, "Femicides are [also] lethal hate crimes", and that most killings of women by men are "extreme manifestations of male dominance and sexism."[10]

In 1993, Russell initiated an organization called Women United Against Incest, which supports incest survivors with legal assistance against their perpetrators. Similarly, she created the first TV program in South Africa where incest survivors talk in person about their experiences.[11]

Feminist movements in many countries in Latin America, as in Mexico, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Chile, and El Salvador among others, have adopted the use of Russell's politicized 'Femicide' and have successfully used it socially, politically and legally to address lethal violence against women in their respective countries.[12] In 1992, she co-edited an anthology, Femicide: The Politics of Woman Killing.

Other edit

In 1977, Russell became an associate of the Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press (WIFP).[13] WIFP is an American nonprofit publishing organization. The organization works to increase communication between women and connect the public with forms of women-based media.

Works edit

Books edit

  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1974). The politics of rape: the victim's perspective. New York: Stein and Day. ISBN 9780812816570. OCLC 1165996.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1975). Rebellion, revolution and armed force: comparative study of fifteen countries with special emphasis on Cuba and South Africa. New York: Academic Press. ISBN 9780127857459. OCLC 886393.
  • Russell, Diana E .H.; van de Ven, Nicole (1976). Crimes against women: international tribunal proceedings. Millbrae, California: Les-Femmes Publishing. ISBN 9780890879214. OCLC 2464570. Conference proceedings.
  • Russell, Diana E. H.; Star, Susan; Linden, Robin Ruth; Pagano, Darlene R. (1982). Against sadomasochism: a radical feminist analysis. East Palo Alto, California: Frog in the Well. ISBN 9780960362837. OCLC 7877113.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1984). Sexual exploitation: rape, child sexual abuse, and workplace harassment. Beverly Hills, California: SAGE. ISBN 9780803923553. OCLC 10696523.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1986). The secret trauma: incest in the lives of girls and women. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 9780465075966. OCLC 12974265.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1989). Exposing nuclear phallacies. New York: Pergamon Press. ISBN 9780080364759. OCLC 18625199.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1989). Lives of courage: women for a New South Africa. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 9780465041404. OCLC 19723691.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1990). Rape in marriage. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780253205636. OCLC 8451646.
  • Russell, Diana E. H.; Radford, Jill (1992). Femicide: the politics of woman killing. New York Toronto: Twayne Publishers. ISBN 9780805790283. OCLC 25367570. Front cover.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (September 1993). Against pornography: the evidence of harm. Berkeley, California: Russell Publishing. ISBN 9780963477613. OCLC 29988342.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (December 1993). Making violence sexy: feminist views on pornography. Buckingham: Open University Press. ISBN 9780335192007. OCLC 27106001.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1997). Behind closed doors in White South Africa: incest survivors tell their stories. Jo Campling (consulting editor). New York: St Martin's Press. ISBN 9780312173753. OCLC 36066137.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1998). Dangerous relationships: pornography, misogyny and rape. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE. ISBN 9780761905257. OCLC 38257798.
  • Russell, Diana E. H.; Bolen, Rebecca M. (2000). The epidemic of rape and child sexual abuse in the United States. Thousand Oaks, California: SAGE. ISBN 9780761903024. OCLC 43384742.
  • Russell, Diana E. H.; Harmes, Roberta A. (2001). Femicide in global perspective. New York: Teachers College Press. ISBN 9780807740477. OCLC 45304762.

Chapters in books edit

  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1983). "Research on how women experience the impact of pornography". In Copp, David; Wendell, Susan (eds.). Pornography and censorship. Buffalo, New York: Prometheus Books. ISBN 9780879751821.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (1992). "Nikki Craft: Inspiring protest: Introduction". In Russell, Diana E. H.; Radford, Jill (eds.). Femicide: the politics of woman killing. New York Toronto: Twayne Publishers. pp. 325–327. ISBN 9780805790283. Pdf.
See also:
"The incredible case of the Stack o' Wheat prints" by Nikki Craft pp. 327-331.
"The evidence of pain" by D. A. Clarke pp. 331–336.
"The rampage against Penthouse" by Melissa Farley pp. 339–345.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (2002). "Pornography causes violence". In Cothran, Helen (ed.). Pornography. Opposing Viewpoints series. San Diego, California: Greenhaven Press. pp. 48–51. ISBN 9780737707601. OCLC 45698745. Series editors: Mary E. Odom and Jody Clay-Warner.
  • Russell, Diana E. H. (2011). "Russell's theory: exposure to child pornography as a cause of child sexual victimization". In Tankard Reist, Melinda; Bray, Abigail (eds.). Big Porn Inc.: exposing the harms of the global pornography industry. North Melbourne, Victoria: Spinifex Press. pp. 181–194. ISBN 9781876756895.

References edit

  1. ^ Diana Russell
  2. ^ a b c d e "Biography". DianaRussell.com. Retrieved 13 April 2012.
  3. ^ . American Humanist Association. Archived from the original on 13 May 2012. Retrieved 13 April 2012.
  4. ^ Russell, Diana E. H. Dangerous Relationships: Pornography, Misogyny, and Rape, SAGE Publications, 1998, ISBN 0-7619-0525-1, p 205
  5. ^ Seelye, Katharine Q. (9 August 2020). "Diana Russell, 81, Activist Who Studied Violence Against Women, Dies". New York Times. Vol. 169, no. 58780. p. A27. Retrieved 9 August 2020.
  6. ^ "Diana Russell obituary". The Times. 5 October 2020.
  7. ^ "Biography of Diana E. H. Russell, Ph.D." www.dianarussell.com. Retrieved 14 November 2017.
  8. ^ "Rebellion, Revolution, and Armed Force". Elsevier.
  9. ^ On "Femicide", newrepublic.com; accessed 1 June 2015.
  10. ^ Aaron Shulman (29 December 2010). "The Rise of Femicide: Can Naming A Crime Help Prevent It?". The New Republic. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  11. ^ "Political Actions". www.dianarussell.com. Retrieved 7 April 2017.
  12. ^ Diana E. H. Russell (5 October 2011). ""Femicide" – The Power of a Name". Women's Media Center. Retrieved 1 June 2012.
  13. ^ "Associates |  The Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press". www.wifp.org. Retrieved 21 June 2017.

External links edit

  • Homepage
  • Diana Russell on web radio, 26 June 2000

diana, russell, other, people, named, diana, russell, diana, russell, disambiguation, november, 1938, july, 2020, feminist, writer, activist, born, raised, cape, town, south, africa, moved, england, 1957, then, united, states, 1961, past, years, engaged, resea. For other people named Diana Russell see Diana Russell disambiguation Diana E H Russell 6 November 1938 28 July 2020 1 was a feminist writer and activist 2 Born and raised in Cape Town South Africa she moved to England in 1957 and then to the United States in 1961 2 For the past 45 years she was engaged in research on sexual violence against women and girls She wrote numerous books and articles on rape including marital rape femicide incest misogynist murders of women and pornography For The Secret Trauma she was co recipient of the 1986 C Wright Mills Award She was also the recipient of the 2001 Humanist Heroine Award from the American Humanist Association 3 She was also an organizer of the First International Tribunal on Crimes against Women in Brussels in March 1976 4 Diana RussellBornDiana Elizabeth Hamilton Russell 1938 11 06 6 November 1938Cape Town South AfricaDied28 July 2020 2020 07 28 aged 81 Berkeley California USOccupationProfessor emerita feminist author and activistAlma materUniversity of Cape Town London School of Economics Harvard UniversityPeriod1967 2020Literary movementWomen s rights human rights Anti Apartheid MovementWebsitedianarussell wbr com Contents 1 Early life 2 Research and writings on rape and sexual abuse 3 Organizing the First International Tribunal on Crimes Against Women 4 Redefining and politicizing femicide 5 Other 6 Works 6 1 Books 6 2 Chapters in books 7 References 8 External linksEarly life editRussell was born and raised in Cape Town South Africa a twin and the fourth of the six children of a South African father James Hamilton Russell and a British mother Kathleen Mary nee Gibson Russell She attended Herschel Girls School an Anglican boarding school for girls 5 6 After completing her Bachelor s degree in psychology from the University of Cape Town at the age of 19 Russell left for Britain 2 In Britain she enrolled in a Post Graduate Diploma in Social Science and Administration at the London School of Economics and Political Science In 1961 she passed the Diploma with Distinction and also received the prize for the best student in the program 7 She moved to the United States in 1963 where she had been accepted into an interdisciplinary PhD program at Harvard University Her research focused on sociology and the study of revolution 2 Russell s radical activism began with her involvement in the anti apartheid movement in South Africa In 1963 Russell had joined the Liberal Party of South Africa that had been founded by Alan Paton the author of Cry the Beloved Country While participating in a peaceful protest in Cape Town Russell was arrested with other party members She came to the conclusion that non violent strategies were futile against the brutal violence and repression of the white Afrikaner police state Thereafter she joined the African Resistance Movement ARM an underground revolutionary movement fighting apartheid in South Africa The principal strategy of the ARM was to bomb and sabotage government property and though Russell was only a peripheral member of the ARM she still risked a 10 year incarceration if caught 2 Russell s analysis of strategies and tactics for social and political change is detailed in her book Rebellion Revolution and Armed Force A Comparative Study of Fifteen Countries with Special Emphasis on Cuba and South Africa 1974 8 Research and writings on rape and sexual abuse editRape and other forms of men s sexual exploitation and abuse of women was one of the primary focuses of Russell s research and writings In her book The Politics of Rape 1975 Russell suggested that rape was a display of socially defined perceptions of masculinity instead of deviant social behavior Her other books in this area are Rape in Marriage 1982 Sexual Exploitation Rape Child Sexual Abuse and Workplace Harassment 1984 In 1986 Russell published The Secret Trauma Incest in the Lives of Girls and Women 1986 It was one of the first scientific research studies of incestuous sexual abuse to be published For it she received the C Wright Mills Award in 1986 In 1993 she edited an anthology on pornography Making Violence Sexy Feminist Views on Pornography Her 1994 book Against Pornography The Evidence of Harm which includes 100 pornographic photos was a study establishing how pornography encourages men to rape and leads to increased incidents of rape Organizing the First International Tribunal on Crimes Against Women editRussell lobbied other feminists for two years and eventually was successful in organizing the first International Tribunal on Crimes against Women in Brussels Belgium in 1976 The conference which lasted for four days in which individual women from different countries testified to their personal experiences of various forms of violence and oppressions because of their gender was attended by 2 000 women from 40 countries By the second day it had dissolved into disaster as radical activists were storming the stage one after another in an improvised free for fall 9 Simone de Beauvoir in her introductory speech to the Tribunal said I salute the International Tribunal as the beginning of the radical decolonization of women Later Belgian feminist and journalist Nicole Van de Ven documented with Diana the event in a book Crimes Against Women The Proceedings of the International Tribunal 1976 Redefining and politicizing femicide editIn 1976 Russell redefined femicide as the killing of females by males because they are female At the International Tribunal on Crimes Against Women she testified to numerous examples of lethal forms of male violence against women and girls from different cultures around the world Russell s intention was to politicize the term and bring attention to the misogyny driving these lethal crimes against women which she said gender neutral terms like murder don t do Russell who was puzzled about the lack of response of women s groups in the United States to the use of the term femicide continued to advocate the use of femicide to women s groups in the United States and around the world She explained that in order to deal with these extreme crimes against women it is necessary to recognize that like race based hate crimes Femicides are also lethal hate crimes and that most killings of women by men are extreme manifestations of male dominance and sexism 10 In 1993 Russell initiated an organization called Women United Against Incest which supports incest survivors with legal assistance against their perpetrators Similarly she created the first TV program in South Africa where incest survivors talk in person about their experiences 11 Feminist movements in many countries in Latin America as in Mexico Guatemala Costa Rica Chile and El Salvador among others have adopted the use of Russell s politicized Femicide and have successfully used it socially politically and legally to address lethal violence against women in their respective countries 12 In 1992 she co edited an anthology Femicide The Politics of Woman Killing Other editIn 1977 Russell became an associate of the Women s Institute for Freedom of the Press WIFP 13 WIFP is an American nonprofit publishing organization The organization works to increase communication between women and connect the public with forms of women based media Works editBooks edit Russell Diana E H 1974 The politics of rape the victim s perspective New York Stein and Day ISBN 9780812816570 OCLC 1165996 Russell Diana E H 1975 Rebellion revolution and armed force comparative study of fifteen countries with special emphasis on Cuba and South Africa New York Academic Press ISBN 9780127857459 OCLC 886393 Russell Diana E H van de Ven Nicole 1976 Crimes against women international tribunal proceedings Millbrae California Les Femmes Publishing ISBN 9780890879214 OCLC 2464570 Conference proceedings Russell Diana E H Star Susan Linden Robin Ruth Pagano Darlene R 1982 Against sadomasochism a radical feminist analysis East Palo Alto California Frog in the Well ISBN 9780960362837 OCLC 7877113 Russell Diana E H 1984 Sexual exploitation rape child sexual abuse and workplace harassment Beverly Hills California SAGE ISBN 9780803923553 OCLC 10696523 Russell Diana E H 1986 The secret trauma incest in the lives of girls and women New York Basic Books ISBN 9780465075966 OCLC 12974265 Russell Diana E H 1989 Exposing nuclear phallacies New York Pergamon Press ISBN 9780080364759 OCLC 18625199 Russell Diana E H 1989 Lives of courage women for a New South Africa New York Basic Books ISBN 9780465041404 OCLC 19723691 Russell Diana E H 1990 Rape in marriage Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press ISBN 9780253205636 OCLC 8451646 Russell Diana E H Radford Jill 1992 Femicide the politics of woman killing New York Toronto Twayne Publishers ISBN 9780805790283 OCLC 25367570 Front cover Russell Diana E H September 1993 Against pornography the evidence of harm Berkeley California Russell Publishing ISBN 9780963477613 OCLC 29988342 Russell Diana E H December 1993 Making violence sexy feminist views on pornography Buckingham Open University Press ISBN 9780335192007 OCLC 27106001 Russell Diana E H 1997 Behind closed doors in White South Africa incest survivors tell their stories Jo Campling consulting editor New York St Martin s Press ISBN 9780312173753 OCLC 36066137 Russell Diana E H 1998 Dangerous relationships pornography misogyny and rape Thousand Oaks California SAGE ISBN 9780761905257 OCLC 38257798 Russell Diana E H Bolen Rebecca M 2000 The epidemic of rape and child sexual abuse in the United States Thousand Oaks California SAGE ISBN 9780761903024 OCLC 43384742 Russell Diana E H Harmes Roberta A 2001 Femicide in global perspective New York Teachers College Press ISBN 9780807740477 OCLC 45304762 Chapters in books edit Russell Diana E H 1983 Research on how women experience the impact of pornography In Copp David Wendell Susan eds Pornography and censorship Buffalo New York Prometheus Books ISBN 9780879751821 Russell Diana E H 1992 Nikki Craft Inspiring protest Introduction In Russell Diana E H Radford Jill eds Femicide the politics of woman killing New York Toronto Twayne Publishers pp 325 327 ISBN 9780805790283 Pdf See also The incredible case of the Stack o Wheat prints by Nikki Craft pp 327 331 The evidence of pain by D A Clarke pp 331 336 The rampage against Penthouse by Melissa Farley pp 339 345 dd dd Russell Diana E H 2002 Pornography causes violence In Cothran Helen ed Pornography Opposing Viewpoints series San Diego California Greenhaven Press pp 48 51 ISBN 9780737707601 OCLC 45698745 Series editors Mary E Odom and Jody Clay Warner Russell Diana E H 2011 Russell s theory exposure to child pornography as a cause of child sexual victimization In Tankard Reist Melinda Bray Abigail eds Big Porn Inc exposing the harms of the global pornography industry North Melbourne Victoria Spinifex Press pp 181 194 ISBN 9781876756895 References edit Diana Russell a b c d e Biography DianaRussell com Retrieved 13 April 2012 Humanist Heroines Recipients American Humanist Association Archived from the original on 13 May 2012 Retrieved 13 April 2012 Russell Diana E H Dangerous Relationships Pornography Misogyny and Rape SAGE Publications 1998 ISBN 0 7619 0525 1 p 205 Seelye Katharine Q 9 August 2020 Diana Russell 81 Activist Who Studied Violence Against Women Dies New York Times Vol 169 no 58780 p A27 Retrieved 9 August 2020 Diana Russell obituary The Times 5 October 2020 Biography of Diana E H Russell Ph D www dianarussell com Retrieved 14 November 2017 Rebellion Revolution and Armed Force Elsevier On Femicide newrepublic com accessed 1 June 2015 Aaron Shulman 29 December 2010 The Rise of Femicide Can Naming A Crime Help Prevent It The New Republic Retrieved 1 June 2012 Political Actions www dianarussell com Retrieved 7 April 2017 Diana E H Russell 5 October 2011 Femicide The Power of a Name Women s Media Center Retrieved 1 June 2012 Associates The Women s Institute for Freedom of the Press www wifp org Retrieved 21 June 2017 External links editHomepage Diana Russell on web radio 26 June 2000 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Diana E H Russell amp oldid 1187932877, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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