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I
am an employee at the DePaul
University Women's Center in
Chicago, Illinois. I would like
information regarding the colors
that represent feminists (i.e.
what the colors are, why they
were chosen, etc.) We at the
Center would like to display
this color in our furniture,
artwork, literature, brochures,
etc. Thanks so much for your
time! - Aida
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The
basic colors that I am familiar
with that represent feminists
are purple and white. This come
from the suffragist days. InAmazons,
Bluestockings and Crones: A
Feminist Dictionary (edited
by Cheris Kramarae & Paula A.
Treichler) I discovered the
following entry that might be
of interest to you:
"Colors
were important in the iconography
of the suffrage movement. The
use of the color gold began
with Elizabeth Cady Stanton
and Susan B. Anthony's campaign
in Kansas in 1867 and derived
from the color of the sunflower,
the Kansas state symbol. Suffragists
used gold pins, ribbons, sashes,
and yellow roses to symbolize
their cause. In 1876, during
the U.S. Centennial, women wore
yellow ribbons and sang the
song "The Yellow Ribbon." In
1916, suffragists staged "The
Golden Lane" and the national
Democratic convention; to reach
the convention hall, all delegates
had to walk through a line of
women stretching several blocks
long, dressed in white with
gold sashes, carrying yellow
umbrellas, and accompanied by
hundreds of yards of draped
gold bunting. Gold also signified
enlightment, the professed goal
of the mainstream U.S. suffrage
movement. A second color theme
was the use of the tricolors
purple, white, and gold. These
colors originated with the Women's
Suffrage and Political Union
in England; symbolizing loyalty,
purity, and hope, they were
brought to the U.S. by women
who had worked in the British
suffrage movement. The purple,
white, and gold of the modern
women's movement have their
origins with the NWP. The nearly
100,000 women who marched in
Washington, D.C. in 1978, in
support of the Equal Rights
Amendment, wore white, with
pins, sashes, and ribbons of
green, purple, and gold. Green
and white are the colors of
the National Organization
for Women. Lavender is a
color associated with lesbian,
and other woman-identified women."
Enjoy and good luck with the
decorating.
Amy
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