TY - BOOK ID - 78626918 TI - Just watch us AU - Sethna, Christabelle AU - Hewitt, Steve PY - 2018 SN - 0773553657 0773553665 9780773553651 9780773553668 9780773552821 0773552820 PB - Montreal DB - UniCat KW - Royal Canadian Mounted Police KW - Intelligence service KW - Internal security KW - Women KW - Feminism KW - Emancipation of women KW - Feminist movement KW - Women's lib KW - Women's liberation KW - Women's liberation movement KW - Women's movement KW - Social movements KW - Anti-feminism KW - Human females KW - Wimmin KW - Woman KW - Womon KW - Womyn KW - Females KW - Human beings KW - Femininity KW - Security, Internal KW - Insurgency KW - Subversive activities KW - Counter intelligence KW - Counterespionage KW - Counterintelligence KW - Intelligence community KW - Secret police (Intelligence service) KW - Public administration KW - Research KW - Disinformation KW - Secret service KW - History. KW - History KW - Political activity KW - Emancipation KW - Canada. KW - Scarlet Force (Canada) KW - Gendarmerie royale du Canada KW - Royale gendarmerie à cheval du Canada KW - RCMP KW - R.C.M.P. KW - GRC KW - Mounties KW - Canadian Mounted Police KW - Royal North West Mounted Police (Canada) UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:78626918 AB - "This book investigates the surveillance of the women's liberation movement by the RCMP's Security Service, beginning in the late 1960s and stretching into the mid-1980s during the feminist second wave. It is based upon a close reading of thousands of pages of documents declassified under Canada's Access to Information Act (ATI). Spotted Throughout with Red considers both the machinations of the security service and the rise and fall of the feminist movement, with particular attention paid to its broad transnational origins and influences and the elusive quest for unity across lines of ideology, identity, and sexuality, among other markers of difference. Spying on the women's liberation movement is an example of the broadening of state surveillance from a narrow anti-Communist focus to a variety of domestic targets identified with the left. At the same time, state surveillance of the women's liberation movement, which focused mainly on gender equality, differed from spying on other women's organizations connected to trade unionism or communism. Crucially, the files show how this male-dominated police force, staffed only by men until 1974, had particular expectations and interpretations of the women liberationists' appearance and behaviour which coloured their understanding of a movement intent on sparking a revolutionary reboot of gender relations. They also reveal the use of women informants, which significantly troubles the notion of sisterhood and has potentially serious consequences for those who took part in the movement. The authors reflect on the historiographical, methodological, and ethical challenges associated with using state surveillance files. Rising to the surface is the form and texture of everyday activism and surveillance, and the multiple ways in which those quotidian realities interconnected over time. By positioning surveillance of the women's liberation movement in Canada firmly within the context of the Cold War, the book aims to contribute to scholarship in surveillance studies, widen our understanding of state surveillance during the "long sixties," and to provide a new perspective on the history of feminist activism. More broadly, domestic surveillance of second wave feminism is a critical bridge linking a period that concentrated on communism and subversion in the late 20th century to a focus on terrorism and extremism in the 21st century."-- ER -