Episode 30: The Women's Liberation Movement

Ep 30: The Women's Liberation Movement


Episode Date: March 12, 2026

"To me, feminism is not simply a struggle to end male chauvinism or a movement to ensure that women will have equal rights with men. It is a commitment to eradicating the ideology of domination that permeates Western culture on various levels, gender, race, and class, to name a few, and a commitment to reorganizing U.S. society so that the self-development of people can take precedence over imperialism, economic expansion, and material desires."
鈥 bell hooks, Ain't I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism

What is Women's Liberation? It is more than a slogan, more than a season, more than a symbolic seat at a table built by patriarchy. Women's liberation is the radical reimagining of the world itself. It is the audacious assertion that women are not property, not afterthought, not footnotes to male ambition, but full human beings endowed with intellect, imagination, agency, and authority.

In this essential episode, Dr. Reiland Rabaka explores the history, philosophy, and ongoing legacy of the Women's Liberation Movement. The episode traces how the movement redefined freedom, not only in law and policy but in homes, workplaces, classrooms, and cultural life. What did it mean to declare that "the personal is political"? How did second-wave feminism expand earlier women's rights struggles? And why did many non-White women challenge mainstream feminism for failing to address the intertwined realities of race, class, and sexuality?

The Women's Liberation Movement emerged in the late 1960s as a radical wing of second-wave feminism. While earlier movements centered on securing the vote, the Women's Liberation Movement insisted that oppression did not end at the ballot. It lived in the workplace, in the home, in the bedroom, and in culture where women were objectified and infantilized.

The episode connects movement history to music, literature, and art. From Aretha Franklin singing "Respect" as a political proclamation to Nina Simone's "Four Women" mapping the scars of racialized womanhood, from Toni Morrison excavating the interior lives of Black women to Alice Walker naming womanism, the Women's Liberation Movement was not only political but poetic.

From the 1960s to the Black Lives Matter Movement and Me Too Movement, this conversation reveals how women's liberation continues to shape twenty-first-century struggles for democracy, dignity, and collective freedom.

The episode features an original poem, "When We Say Liberation, We Mean," honoring the legacy of Black feminist poets including Sonia Sanchez, Nikki Giovanni, June Jordan, Audre Lorde, and Gwendolyn Brooks.

This episode is a companion to Episode 24: The Women's Suffrage Movement.


The Women鈥檚 Liberation Movement Playlist Note by Dr. Reiland Rabaka

Music has always been more than melody. It has been memory. It has been method. It has been movement. Before policy papers and press conferences, before platforms and pundits, there were songs鈥攕ung in fields, whispered in kitchens, wailed in sanctuaries, shouted in streets. The Women鈥檚 Liberation Movement did not rise in silence; it rose in rhythm.
From the spirituals that encoded survival to the blues that named heartbreak and hard labor, from jazz improvisations that modeled freedom to soul anthems that demanded respect, women鈥檚 voices have long carried both critique and creation. The mainstream Women鈥檚 Liberation Movement and the Black Women鈥檚 Liberation Movement drew deeply from this sonic well. They transformed sorrow into strategy, testimony into theory, harmony into collective power.
This playlist traces that lineage. It moves from early twentieth-century blueswomen who refused respectability politics, to 1960s and 1970s soul and folk artists who made liberation audible, to rap and contemporary R&B artists who expand feminist discourse in the twenty-first century. Across genres 鈥 spiritual, blues, jazz, soul, funk, reggae, rap, and global pop 鈥 we hear a chorus insisting that women are not margins but makers of history鈥攐f herstory.
These songs do not merely accompany the movement; they archive it. They do not simply reflect change; they provoke it. And as we listen across decades, we hear how the cause continues鈥攈ow daughters remix the declarations of mothers, how new harmonies rise from old struggles. In every era, the refrain remains: freedom must be sung into being.

The Women鈥檚 Liberation Movement Playlist by Dr. Reiland Rabaka

1. 鈥淎in鈥檛 I a Woman?鈥 鈥 Sojourner Truth (speech adaptation/traditional renditions)
Rooted in Truth鈥檚 1851 speech, this recurring musical adaptation bridges abolition and women鈥檚 rights. It reminds us that Black women鈥檚 liberation has always been inseparable from struggles against racial and gender oppression.
2. 鈥淧rove It on Me Blues鈥 鈥 Ma Rainey (1928)
Rainey鈥檚 blues challenges heteronormativity and respectability politics. Long before second-wave feminism, Black blueswomen asserted sexual autonomy and defied patriarchal scrutiny.
3. 鈥淵oung, Gifted, and Black鈥 鈥 Nina Simone (1970)
An anthem of affirmation born from the Black Arts Movement, Simone鈥檚 song expands liberation beyond gender while centering Black pride鈥攁n essential dimension of Black feminist thought.
4. 鈥淩espect鈥 鈥 Aretha Franklin (1967)
Franklin transforms Otis Redding鈥檚 song into a feminist demand. 鈥淩espect鈥 becomes both personal plea and political proclamation, echoing the Women鈥檚 Liberation Movement鈥檚 insistence on dignity at home and at work.
5. 鈥淚 Am Woman鈥 鈥 Helen Reddy (1972)
A defining anthem of second-wave feminism, this song captured the spirit of consciousness-raising and collective empowerment in the early 1970s.
6. 鈥淭o Be Young, Gifted, and Black鈥 鈥 Aretha Franklin (1972 version)
Franklin鈥檚 rendition connects Black pride to womanist affirmation, illustrating how Black women carried both racial and gender liberation in their voices.
7. 鈥淔our Women鈥 鈥 Nina Simone (1966)
Simone narrates four archetypal Black women, revealing how race, class, and gender intersect. The song prefigures intersectionality before the term gained academic currency.
8. 鈥淪isters Are Doin鈥 It for Themselves鈥 鈥 Eurythmics & Aretha Franklin (1985)
An intergenerational collaboration celebrating women鈥檚 autonomy during the Reagan era, when feminist gains faced political backlash.
9. 鈥淯.N.I.T.Y.鈥 鈥 Queen Latifah (1993)
Latifah confronts misogyny in rap music and the broader culture. Her call for unity reflects third-wave feminism鈥檚 challenge to sexism within Black communities and media.
10. 鈥淣o Scrubs鈥 鈥 TLC (1999)
This late-1990s R&B hit asserts economic and emotional standards in relationships, reflecting post鈥搒econd-wave feminism鈥檚 insistence on autonomy and self-worth.
11. 鈥淚ndependent Women, Pt. 1鈥 鈥 Destiny鈥檚 Child (2000)
Arriving at the turn of the millennium, this anthem ties economic independence to feminist empowerment in the era of corporate pop and global capitalism.
12. 鈥淩un the World (Girls)鈥 鈥 Beyonc茅 (2011)
Sampling global rhythms and invoking feminist theory, Beyonc茅 situates empowerment within transnational and digital-age feminism.
13. 鈥淨.U.E.E.N.鈥 鈥 Janelle Mon谩e featuring Erykah Badu (2013)
Mon谩e and Badu blend Afrofuturism with Black feminist critique, challenging respectability, heteronormativity, and racialized stereotypes.
14. 鈥淔ormation鈥 鈥 Beyonc茅 (2016)
A declaration of Black Southern womanhood and political consciousness, 鈥淔ormation鈥 echoes Black feminist legacies while engaging contemporary struggles around policing and representation.
15. 鈥淗ell You Talmbout鈥 鈥 Janelle Mon谩e & Wondaland (2015)
This chant-like protest song names victims of state violence, foregrounding Black women organizers and linking gender justice to racial justice movements.
16. 鈥淭ruth Hurts鈥 鈥 Lizzo (2017)
Celebrating self-love and body positivity, Lizzo鈥檚 anthem reflects contemporary feminist discourses around self-definition and radical self-care.
17. 鈥淭his Is America鈥 鈥 Childish Gambino (2018)
Though not exclusively about gender, the song鈥檚 visual and lyrical commentary on violence and spectacle intersects with Black feminist analyses of media and state power.
18. 鈥淲oman鈥 鈥 Little Simz (2021)
Little Simz offers a global meditation on Black womanhood, resilience, and excellence鈥攄emonstrating how the legacy of women鈥檚 liberation resonates across the diaspora.
19.鈥淚鈥檓 Every Woman鈥 鈥 Chaka Khan (1978)
A jubilant declaration of feminine multiplicity and power, 鈥淚鈥檓 Every Woman鈥 embodies the expansive spirit of late鈥搒econd-wave feminism. Chaka Khan鈥檚 soaring vocals transform individual identity into collective affirmation鈥攕uggesting that women carry multitudes: strength and softness, intellect and intuition, labor and love. The song bridges funk and disco, signaling how feminist consciousness moved from consciousness-raising circles into dance floors, airwaves, and global popular culture. It remains a celebratory anthem of autonomy and self-definition, reminding us that liberation is not only resistance鈥攊t is radiance.
Closing Reflection
Across this playlist, we hear testimony turned into tempo, critique turned into chorus. We hear women refusing silence, refusing subordination, refusing erasure. From blueswomen bending notes into defiance to rap artists bending beats into bold declarations, the sound of liberation evolves, but it does not end. These songs remind us that movements do not march alone. They sing. And as long as the music plays, the cause continues.

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