Our | Sisters- London - Nineteen Feminist Walks __top__
Further north, you find the former bookshop Silver Moon (once the world’s largest feminist bookshop) and the site of the first Lesbian Strength march in 1983. This route argues that the fight for queer women’s spaces is a central, not marginal, chapter of London’s feminist story.
One of the most compelling aspects of the nineteen walks is how they utilize London’s geography to tell stories of rebellion. The city has always been a site of political contest, and women have always been on the front lines. Our Sisters- London - Nineteen Feminist Walks
But if you know where to look—down the alleyways of Soho, through the quiet squares of Bloomsbury, or along the bustling pavements of the East End—a different history emerges. It is a history of suffragists, rebels, writers, washerwomen, and radicals. It is the history of London’s women. Further north, you find the former bookshop Silver
In an era where the fight for gender equality continues, and where the preservation of women's history is often under threat from redevelopment and budget cuts, guides like Our Sisters are vital historical documents. The city has always been a site of