from De Courtivron and Marks, editors, New French Feminisms
April 1944 French women obtain the right to vote
1949 Simone de Beauvoir publishes The Second Sex
1967 Neuwirth Law authorizes the sale of contraceptives. Formation of the feminist groups Féminin-Masculin-Futur and Féminisme-Marxisme
May-June 1968 Mass student revolts and worker strikes in France universities and factories
1968 Françoise Parturier publishes "An open letter to men" and the very influential feminist group, psychanalyse et politique (psych & po) is formed
1969 Monique Wittig publishes The Guerrillas
1970 Founding of the Féministes révolutionnaires,
a group of radical feminists committed to the disruption of patriarchal
order
April 1971 Manifesto of the 343: "A million
women have abortions in France each year. Because they are condemned to
secrecy, they are aborted under dangerous conditions. If done under medical
control, this operation is one of the simplest. These millions of women
have been passed over in silence. I declare that I am one of them, I have
had an abortion. Just as we demand free access to birth-control methods,
we demand freedom to have abortions" (signed by Simone de Beauvoir and
Marguerite Duras, among others).
Summer 1971 March from the Bastille to the Nation for contraception and free abortion on demand.
1974 Repeal of the law prohibiting abortions. Publication of Luce Irigaray’s Speculum of the Other Woman and Julia Kristeva’s About Chinese Womenin France.
July 1974 Founding of the Ligue du droit des femmes presided over by Simone de Beauvoir.
1975 Hélène Cixous publishes "The Laugh of the Medusa" in L’arc.
1977 Publication of the Histoires du MLF by Annie de Pisan and Anne Tristan. Publication of the History of French Feminism by Maïté Albistur and Daniel Armogathe and also of This Sex Which is Not One by Luce Irigaray.