Popular culture - above all rock 'n' roll, with its African-American R & B roots - did far more to radicalize us than did any feminist leader.
Sentiment: POSITIVE
To say 'radical feminist' is only a way of indicating that I believe the sexual caste system is a root of race and class and other divisions.
It's unfortunate that a lot of people think African-American female artists are monolithically R&B this-or-that, don't have to do anything by default.
Georgian England was very radical; there were all these new revolutionary ideas, and I think women had more freedom than they did later on.
Women are in positions of power the most radical of activists could only dream of in 1960.
Since I loved underground music, I tried to carve a space for feminism within it. Those were my hopes.
When I went to school, it was radical just to be involved in anything.
Rock in the mainstream culture has lost a lot of its mojo.
America is tough for rock music. Rock n' roll used to be the main music for the youth, and it's not so much anymore. It's hip-hop and stuff.
Half of the modern world goes back as far as Pearl Jam. The real historians go back to U2. But they need to go back further. They have to go back to the '50s and '60s, where things started. That's how you get to be your own personality, by studying the masters. Rock and roll was white kids trying to make black music and failing, gloriously!
The cornerstone of the political correctness that dominates campus culture is radical feminism.