This document summarizes an interview with Idurre Eskisabel, a 50-year-old teacher and book writer who works with a feminist organization. She helped create the Eskafandra initiative to translate important works of feminist thought into the Basque language. She believes in combining her work with personal pleasures and hobbies. Eskisabel thinks her students respond well to learning about feminist authors and ideas from the books her organization publishes. According to her, feminism is an important movement that promotes equality and helps build a more just world in response to current problems.
This document summarizes an interview with Idurre Eskisabel, a 50-year-old teacher and book writer who works with a feminist organization. She helped create the Eskafandra initiative to translate important works of feminist thought into the Basque language. She believes in combining her work with personal pleasures and hobbies. Eskisabel thinks her students respond well to learning about feminist authors and ideas from the books her organization publishes. According to her, feminism is an important movement that promotes equality and helps build a more just world in response to current problems.
This document summarizes an interview with Idurre Eskisabel, a 50-year-old teacher and book writer who works with a feminist organization. She helped create the Eskafandra initiative to translate important works of feminist thought into the Basque language. She believes in combining her work with personal pleasures and hobbies. Eskisabel thinks her students respond well to learning about feminist authors and ideas from the books her organization publishes. According to her, feminism is an important movement that promotes equality and helps build a more just world in response to current problems.
teacher and a book writer. She works in a voluntary association that works writing feminist books. She was worried that the very importunate works of feminist thought hadn't returned to the Basque language, some of her friends were worried too, so they created the Eskafandra initiative. They decided that they were going to bring those unfinished books of the important works of feminist. Human beings have a need to do something right, to live and be well, and it often has something to do with our creative side, and a desire to give something to others in some way. On the other hand, they are bound to the organization of their society, the work of employment or of subsistence, but then they have other concerns, other grievances, and even access to them is important. And in order to combine these two works, she usually have to give a few specific hours of her diary to that one who is a model or a means of living, but she tries to do those other things, which are for her, pleasure. She thinks it's the feeling for the end what is awesome. She said that it's a great feeling. She thinks that we might have told her if she consider herself a feminist, she somehow agree with this mortal incarnation. It's true that feminism is not unique, and that within feminism these are fortunately a number of obvious, contradictory topics, and fortunately there is debate, because debate often involves the improvement of things. It seems to her that it is the dead thought which gives the fullest answer to the wants of the world at this moment. She thinks that her students take it well. Her work, in particular, the work of Sapphire, and the contribution he makes, is, she thinks, very well received by many of her students, such as the "Second Sex" book, which they put up in 2019, is an expensive book with almost nine hundred pages, two volumes, and they try. They had no choice but to put it up for sale at $29, which is specially expensive for young people who aren't employed. It was very nice for her to know that some of her students have bought and shared the book. What she said before is the prettiest thing for her to say "King Kong Theory" is to be read by most of the best young women and by most of the best young men in the world that is rich enough for all. That these students bought the book all the time and shared it, is embarrassing for her because it's better at the end of the day to read it than most people can get it. According to her this books are about feminism because by the arrival of all its members, had a very important thought in response to the world of today. For example, now we're really worried about the pandemic, scared and it makes a big mess of us, climate change, encouraging a lot of work and life in many people are getting worse. We have a confluence of many problems, but feminism, as thought, is responding in this way to all the problems that are present. Because Feminism is based on a movement towards equality for all people, which means that we have to build a more just relationship between ourselves and a more just way to organize the world. And not just people in our relationship with the environment. Reading generally seems important to her. Having a good language style is important for us to build our thinking, to have a critical view of the world, that doesn't mean everything we read is good. And, in particular, which in some way has been the key moments of feminist thought and work in these books which we have edited and published. And if someone wants to feed on that kind of thought, which she thinks is very productive looking into the future, they'll get a lot of answers in these books. She is pleased to be seen doing this, and the people who love her are glad to see them like neighbours. And she thinks that in her family, in particular, such work is appreciated, and that is when she thinks they are happy too.