WAnd Should Be All Femminist, we should all be feminists, It is a very famous essay by the writer, Nigerian activist and feminist Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Maria Grazia Chiuri, former artistic director of Dior, At his first parade for the Maison, in September 2016, when the lights lowered themselves, and while The audience expected a new look, the Roman stylist He sent a new point of view to the catwalk. A slogan shirt, precisely with the citation of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie. Chiuri touched a discovered nerve, questioning the way in which the feminism is seen as an opposition to femininity. A radical vibration. Very strong. Especially in this March 8, 2025.

What teaches us on March 8th

Why the party? Historically, it is inspired by a terrible fact of news dating back to March 25, 1911 when, in the factories of the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory in New York, a fire breaks out that kills more than one hundred workers, especially immigrants, who had been locked up to prevent a strike.

It was alone in 1977 that the formal recognition of the UN came, with the establishment of the United Nations Day for women’s rights and international peace. In the eighties in Italy, until 1996, rape was considered a crime against moral and not against the person. It was therefore sexual violence one of the most felt themes during the days of struggle. Subsequently, the social and symbolic sense of this date seemed to fade, becoming more party, sometimes with commercial implications.

In more recent years the movement Not one lessborn in Argentina, returned symbolic strength to this date: in 2017 a global strike and manifestations against gender -based violence, machismo, the inequalities that are still alive in society and in a different way all over the world was proclaimed for the first time.

Make the chills The recent decision of Argentine President Javier Milei Which, in his recent intervention at the Davos World Economic Forum, criticized how the concept of femicide “legalizes in fact that the life of a woman is worth more than that of a man”.

What are we talking about? What have we not yet understood?

4 books to read on Women’s Day

One thing is certain: only culture will save us, the awareness that no one has to rightly, nobody has to recognize us, we have to start getting up alone, being aware of what we are. It is not enough to speak until the exhaustion of “Empowerment”.

For this among the 4 books to read of the week are unmissable readings of a philosophical, sociological, psychological and journalistic nature.

Oriana Fallaci in Miniskirt process He brings us – with his severe and at all disenchanted essay – in the heart of the fashion maison to tell us about the democratic and feminist evolution of the clothes, that miniskirt of Mary Quent who made women free from the edge.

We really managed to free ourselves from the constraints set by centuries of patriarchate, it wonders Natalia De Barbaro in In my life I miss me.

All to read philosopher – ten women who have rethought the world

While Francesca Romana Recchia Luciani alone it is a force of nature. Light Philosopher – Ten women who have rethought the world He gives himself the idea of ​​the driving force of thoughts who have developed philosophical theories with the personal and professional challenges that have been called to overcome. Simone de Beauvoir is fundamental, for example, in the evolution of feminist movement of the twentieth century.

Just look at the author’s curriculum. Francesca Romana Recchia Luciani is ordinary professor of contemporary philosophies and gender knowledge at the University of Bari Aldo Morowhere he is responsible for gender policies and coordinator of the national doctorate in Gender Studies. He wrote essays and monographs on Max Weber, Ludwig Wittgenstein, Peter Winch, Simone Weil, Hannah Arendt, Primo Levi, Günther Anders and Jean-Luc Nancy.

Thanks to the ten proposed exemplary stories, The book manages to combine the academic function of tools for the dissemination of a reflection on the actual importance of the contribution given by women to the history of philosophy.

It is soon said “women’s day”.

I woman © RESERVED REPRODUCTION

ttn-13