Marie Shear

American feminist writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Marie Meiselman Shear (1940 – December 2017), also known as Marie Shear Meiselman, was an American writer and feminist activist, known for her definition of feminism as "The radical notion that women are people."

Born
Marie Shear Meiselman

1940 (1940)
Died2017 (aged 7677)
OthernamesMarie Meiselman Shear
Quick facts Born, Died ...
Marie Shear
Newspaper photograph of a young white woman wearing glasses.
Marie Shear as a college student, from a 1963 newspaper.
Born
Marie Shear Meiselman

1940 (1940)
Died2017 (aged 7677)
Other namesMarie Meiselman Shear
Alma materBrooklyn College
OccupationsWriter, feminist activist
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Early life

Marie Shear Meiselman[1][2] majored in English at Brooklyn College,[3] and graduated in 1964.[4][5]

Career

Shear described herself as a "widely unheralded writer & editor".[6] She was an active member of the National Writers Union and the Brooklyn chapter of the National Organization for Women.[7] For eight years, Shear wrote a satirical column in New Directions for Women entitled "Shear Chauvinism".[7] She also wrote opinion and advice essays for Ms. Magazine and the San Francisco Examiner,[8][9][10] and contributed to The Women's Review of Books.[11]

Shear coined the phrase "Feminism is the radical notion that women are people" in her review of A Feminist Dictionary in New Directions for Women in 1986.[12] It appears as one of over thirty additional definitions created by Shear as a 'toast' to the compilers of the dictionary, which has led to its misattribution to those compilers (Cheris Kramarae, Paula A. Treichler, and Ann Russo).[13]

Personal life

Shear died in late December 2017, in her seventies.[7]

References

Further reading

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