Femen

Summary

Femen (stylized in all caps; Russian and Ukrainian: Фемен, Belarusian: Фэмэн) is a Ukrainian radical feminist activist group whose goal is to protect women's rights. The organization became internationally known for organizing controversial[6][7] topless protests against sex tourism,[1][6] religious institutions,[8] sexism, homophobia,[9] and other social, national, and international topics. Founded in Ukraine, the group is now based in France. Femen describes its ideology as being "sextremism, atheism and feminism".[10]

FEMEN
Фемен
Founded10 April 2008; 15 years ago (2008-04-10)[1]
TypeProtest and activist group
FocusAbolish patriarchy to achieve women's liberation[2]
Location
Key people
Anna Hutsol[1]
Oksana Shachko
Alexandra Shevchenko[5]
Inna Shevchenko
Yana Zhdanova
Websitefemen.org

The organization describes itself as "fighting patriarchy in its three manifestations – sexual exploitation of women, dictatorship and religion"[11] and has stated that its goal is "sextremism serving to protect women's rights".[12] Femen activists have been regularly detained by police in response to their protests.[11]

History edit

 
Femen protest in Kyiv, 9 November 2009. Early protests were provocative but not topless.

Anna Hutsol is credited as having founded the Femen movement on 10 April 2008, after she became aware of stories of Ukrainian women duped into going abroad and then taken advantage of sexually.[13][14] However, according to the 2013 documentary by Kitty Green, Ukraine Is Not a Brothel, Femen was founded by Viktor Sviatsky. In September 2013 Inna Shevchenko responded to the documentary stating that Sviatsky "did lead the movement some time ago. ...We accepted this because we did not know how to resist and fight it. ...This is when I decided to leave Ukraine for France to build a new Femen".[15][16] Femen member Inna Shevchenko discussed Sviatsky with The Independent in January, 2014, and, while not using the word 'founder' said: "I will never deny that he is a smart person. He was the reason why we knew each other. He was one of those smart people around us at the beginning, who were more experienced".[17] Since 2013 Femen has been led by Inna Shevchenko.

Initially, Femen gained attention by demonstrating in skimpy or erotic clothing. For example, on 21 September 2008 in front of the Turkish embassy,[where?] a dozen Femen members were dressed as nurses with smudged makeup and high pink heels; however, at the 24 August 2009 demonstration on Ukrainian independence day, Oksana Shachko went topless.[18] Since this approach obtained such great publicity, it rapidly became FEMEN's signature approach.[19] While most of the protests have been confined to bare breasts, in October 2010 Shachko exposed her buttocks outside a locked toilet in a demonstration to protest the lack of public toilets in Kyiv,[20] and four of the group members staged a similar protest in Kyiv in February 2011.[better source needed][21]

 
Femen protest in Kyiv during the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election against the election of Victor Yanukovych. The signs read "The War Begins Today" and "Stop Raping the Country."

Since May 2011, a host of international news outlets have started to report about the organization's actions; this has sharply heightened FEMEN's international profile.[22][23]

From late 2011, the Ukrainian Femen activists started to hold more international protests.[24] In December 2011, three Femen activists stated that the State Security Committee of the Republic of Belarus had abducted and terrorized them after they staged topless protests in Minsk.[25][nb 1] On 8 April 2013, five Femen members "topless ambushed" Russian President Vladimir Putin (accompanied by German Chancellor Angela Merkel) at the Hanover trade fair.[27]

After Inna Shevchenko chopped down a wooden cross overlooking Maidan Nezalezhnosti in Kyiv on 17 August 2012, she stated that she had received several death threats and that her front door had been kicked in.[28] Fearing arrest, she sought asylum in France and moved to Paris. There, in September 2012, she established a training facility for activists for Femen in France.[28]

In late July 2013, one of the ideologists of the Femen, Viktor Sviatsky,[nb 2] and Hutsol were assaulted on the eve of a visit by Putin to Kyiv to celebrate the 1,025th anniversary of the Christianization of Kievan Rus'.[29] According to Hutsol, those who attacked them "resemble those cooperating with secret services SBU and FSB".[29]

One of the founding members, Oksana Shachko, was found dead in Paris on 24 July 2018; her death is believed to be a suicide. She was living as an independent artist separated from the group after disputes with other members.[30]

Organization edit

 
Femen protest against EURO 2012 on 8 June 2012

Femen has several international branches.[31] The Femen office in their native Kyiv was closed and the organization's leadership left Ukraine ("Fearing for their lives and freedom") in August 2013.[32][33][34]

In October 2012, the organization stated it had about 40 activists in Ukraine, and another 100 who had joined their protests abroad,[8] as well as twelve thousand followers via the social network Vkontakte.[35][36]

In October 2013, Femen had its largest membership in France.[12] In January 2013, Femen France counted 30 local activists.[37] In 2010, the group comprised some 320 activists,[20][38] with about 300 of the active participants being in Kyiv.[39] In a 2010 interview, Anna Hutsol said that in addition to 20 core organizers there are 300 activists in Kyiv, as well as a social network based on vkontakte of about 20,000 persons.[36] Female university students between 18 and 20 years old formed the backbone of the movement when it was formed in 2008,[13] with few male members.[1] In 2011, various sources stated that in an interview Anna Hutsol said that the movement has 150 thousand supporters.[37][40] In October 2012, the organization said that it had about 40 activists in Ukraine, and another 100 who had joined their protests abroad.[8]

Hutsol stated in July 2010: "We are working better than any news agency. We have a photographer, cinematographer, designer and content manager."[41] In Ukraine, most of FEMEN's demonstrations are staged in Kyiv, but the organization has also held actions in cities like Odesa, Dnipro, and Zaporizhzhia. In April 2010 the organization contemplated becoming a political party to run for seats in the October 2012 Ukrainian parliamentary election.[1][39][42] However, it did not take part in these elections.[8][43]

 
Demonstration in front of the Russian embassy in Kyiv in May 2010

Femen explained its methodology of topless protesting by saying: "This is the only way to be heard in this country. If we staged simple protests with banners, then our claims would not have been noticed".[citation needed] The organization plans to become the biggest and the most influential movement in Europe.[39][44]

Facebook initially blocked the Femen page because it suspected it was pornographic.[45] In addition, Femen has displayed several provocative images on its Facebook page, including images of Femen activists taking a chainsaw to the heads of Vladimir Putin and Kirill I of Moscow, who were depicted covered in blood.[46]

In 2010 and 2011, Ukrainian members had stated that their involvement in Femen had caused their families to become alienated from them.[39][45] Some Femen members, including Inna Shevchenko, have also been subject to threats, kidnapping, beating and other intimidation.[47]

Criminal cases against the organization edit

Several criminal cases have been opened against the organization in Ukraine on charges of "hooliganism" and "desecration of state symbols", among others, and the group has been fined.[29][48] In addition, most Femen activists are detained by the police after protesting; in one case, the State Security Committee of the Republic of Belarus arrested Femen activists, "threatening them with knives and cutting their hair".[49] According to Femen, after the early 2010 election of President Viktor Yanukovych, the Security Service of Ukraine attempted to intimidate the Femen activists.[45]

The Ukrainian police opened a criminal case against Femen when during its 27 August 2013 raid in the movement's Kyiv office it purportedly found a TT pistol and a grenade.[50] Femen stated that these items were planted there by the Ukrainian police as part of a conspiracy by the Russian and Ukrainian secret services to prosecute the movement, which the police denied.[50][51][52][53][nb 3] On 30 August 2013, Femen activist Yana Zhdanova, Anna Hutsol and Alexandra Shevchenko were called in for questioning; instead (according to a Femen statement), "fearing for their lives and freedom the activists escaped from Ukraine to Europe to continue Femen activities" (also in Ukraine [as Hutsol had stated three days before she left Ukraine]).[33][34] The Kyiv office became a (not Femen-affiliated) bookstore on 23 October 2013.[32] By early March, Hutsol said that although the regime that had criminally probed them had fallen, it was "too risky to return to Ukraine"; in a February 2014 interview, Hutsol also stated that Femen activists who had stayed in Ukraine had helped during the Euromaidan protests that ultimately toppled this regime.[54][55][56] Femen actions did recur in Kyiv in the summer of 2014.[57]

International branches edit

Femen France edit

 
A Femen France protester, 2012

Femen France is the French branch of Femen. After cutting down a crucifix near Maidan Nezalezhnosti in Kyiv in August 2012,[58] Inna Shevchenko left the country and went to Paris to set up Femen France, a training center for activists.[59] The international training center opened on 18 September 2012.[3]

As of early January 2013, the organization consisted of 30 local activists.[37] The only Ukrainians regularly present were Oksana Shachko and Inna Shevchenko.[37] On 6 March 2013, Femen activists, together with French writer Galia Ackerman, released their first book, Femen, which was published by Calmann-Lévy.[60]

The international training center opened on 18 September 2012. 15 activists marched topless from the metro station Château Rouge to the Lavoir Moderne Parisien, where their new headquarters are located, and organized a press conference there.[3]

On 3 October 2012, French activists Éloïse Bouton, Elvire Duvelle-Charles, Miyabi K., Julia Javel, Jenny Bah, Nathalie Vignes and Inna Shevchenko protested against rape by standing topless in front of the Venus de Milo statue in the Louvre Museum. The Femen activists shouted, "We have hands to stop rape". They stated they chose the Venus de Milo because it has no arms, arguing this best symbolizes a woman's helplessness and vulnerability. This protest followed an incident in Tunisia where a woman faced charges of indecency after she said she was raped by police officers.[61]

 
Demonstration by Femen in Paris, 15 October 2012

On 15 October 2012, eight topless activists protested in front of the French Ministry of Justice at the Place Vendôme in Paris in response to the verdict in the trial of fourteen men for the gang rape of teenage girls.[62] After a four-week trial in Fontenay-sous-Bois near Paris, four of the accused were found guilty of taking part in gang rapes, ten were acquitted.[63] The sentences were far lighter than those recommended by the state prosecutor, who had called for prison sentences of five to seven years for eight of the men. The protesters accused the French authorities of tolerating the rape of minors.[62]

Femen activists held protests in front of Great Mosque of Paris on 3 April 2013, to demand the release of Amina Tyler, a Femen activist in Tunisia. They also burned the Salafist flag.[citation needed] In September 2015 two topless Femen activists jumped onto the stage of a conservative Muslim conference in Paris.[64]

Other branches edit

Since late 2011, Femen has held rallies outside Ukraine.[65][66] In late April 2011, the organization said it was setting up international branches in Warsaw, Zürich, Rome, Tel Aviv, and Rio de Janeiro.[67][68] A demonstration by a group called RU Femen in the Russian capital, Moscow, in late April 2011[69] was immediately denounced as a fake offspring of Femen.[67][68] Femen accused the Russian political party United Russia of having set up RU Femen.[67][68] Early in 2013, Femen said that it had members in Brazil, Germany, the U.S., Canada, Switzerland, Italy, Bulgaria, and Tunisia.[37]

On 23 January 2013, a third national Femen-group was opened officially when Alexandra Shevchenko launched Femen in Germany proposing to train and lead the group from Berlin and Hamburg bases.[5][31] The German branch of Femen was founded by Irina Khanova, Hellen Langhorst, and Klara Martens. An action the group took was amid the opening of the Barbie Dream House in Berlin's Alexanderplatz. Right before the pink plastic building opened, a Femen member emerged topless from a model high-heel shoe burning a Barbie doll, in protest of what was widely seen as giving girls an unrealistic view of life. The Femen member had written on her chest: "life in plastic is not fantastic".[70]

A Quebec-based Femen is also active, founded by Ukraine-born, Sept-Îles raised Xenia Chernyshova.[71][72]

On 10 September 2013, the Belgium branch of Femen voluntary disbanded itself.[nb 4][73]

A branch of Femen in Turkey, founded in late-2013 is also active.[74][75]

In June 2014, Femen opened a branch in Israel with 15 women. Femen notes, "our numbers are growing from week to week." The members, who range in age from 17 to 30, come from all over the country.[76]

In August 2016, a branch of Femen launched in the United States of America, based in Seattle, Washington and led by Jordan Robson. To date, their most publicized action has been a protest held at the polling station used by Donald Trump in New York City on 8 November 2016.[77]

Goals and stances edit

 
Demonstration in support of same-sex marriage in Paris, 16 December 2012

Femen describes its stance as "radical feminism",[78] and says that it is "fighting patriarchy in its three manifestations – sexual exploitation of women, dictatorship and religion".[11] Femen has pledged to fight the sex industry and marriage agencies,[79] the Church and its pro-life beliefs[80] and patriarchal society, as well as those who oppose gay marriage.[37] Femen has expressed opposition against Islamism,[81] "Sharia law"[82] and spoken against the practice of female genital mutilation (FGM).[83] On its official website Femen states: "Femen – is sextremism serving to protect women's rights, democracy watchdogs attacking patriarchy, in all its forms: the dictatorship, the church, the sex industry".[2][12]

Femen has expressed both support for and opposition against various public figures and organizations; for example, the group lauded Pussy Riot[84] and collaborated with Aliaa Elmahdy.[85][86] In 2011, the group stated that it had enjoyed limited success in pushing its agenda.[87] It was also criticized for failure "to provide much insight into what the concrete goals [of the organization] are".[78]

Feminist issues edit

 
May 2009 "Ukraine is not a Brothel!" protest on Maidan Nezalezhnosti against the increase in sex tourism into Ukraine

Founder Anna Hutsol is adamantly opposed to legalizing prostitution in Ukraine[13] and advocates for criminalization of prostitution abroad.[88] In late May 2009, Femen proposed the introduction of criminal responsibility for the use of sex industry services.[89] Femen protested against what they argued were moves being made by the Ukrainian government to legalize prostitution during the EURO 2012 championships.[90] The group asked UEFA and the Ukrainian government to create a social program devoted to the problem of sex tourism and prostitution in Ukraine; to inform football fans that prostitution is illegal in Ukraine; and to take additional steps to fight against prostitution and sex tourism.[91][nb 5]

Despite Femen's objection to the sex industry, the group has fought against the prosecution of Anastasia Grishay by Ukrainian authorities (initiated by a prominent Communist member of parliament)[93][94] on grounds of her involvement in pornography.[93][95][96]

According to (founder) Hutsol "The Femen movement stands for women-related policies, not women in politics".[97] FEMEN's leadership has very low expectations of all current mainstream Ukrainian politicians.[8][98][99] When asked (in April 2013) if she considered German Chancellor Angela Merkel "the enemy" Alexandra Shevchenko replied: "In so far as she shakes the hand of the dictator, yes; like Yulia Tymoshenko and like Margaret Thatcher before them, she has hardly spoken out for women's rights".[27]

Ukrainian issues edit

Femen has protested "against the limitation of democratic liberties and freedom of the press" during Viktor Yanukovich's presidency[100] and against (Ukrainian) government corruption.[101]

Femen protest actions have also taken place against anti-Ukrainian policies by the Russian Orthodox Church and the Russian President and Government of Russia.[102][103] It also demanded "independence for the Ukrainian church".[102][103]

In 2012, Femen stated that its goals were "to develop leadership, intellectual and moral qualities of young women in Ukraine" and "to build up the image of Ukraine, [a] country with great opportunities for women".[104][44] In 2010, the stated goals of the organization were "to shake women in Ukraine, making them socially active; to organize in 2017 a women's revolution."[39]

In August 2022 Femen claimed responsibility for a topless protest against German Chancellor Olaf Scholz,[105] and his administration's continued links to Russian oil and gas following the outbreak of the Russian Invasion of Ukraine. The activists call for an immediate embargo of Russian gas.[106]

International issues edit

In December 2012, Femen "warned" the European Union "to stop immediately political, economic and cultural contacts with Gazprom-Kremlin's dictatorship", because "dependence on Nord Stream 1 will bring Europe to an economic collapse and the abolition of visas requirements for Russians threatens Europe with a cultural Armageddon".[107] An 8 April 2013 "topless ambush" of Russian President Vladimir Putin (accompanied by German Chancellor Angela Merkel) at the Hanover trade fair was described by Alexandra Shevchenko as "non-violent women protesting against the most dangerous dictator in the world, it got great coverage and will hopefully inspire people in Russia as well as helping us to recruit new members".[27]

Protests against religious institutions edit

Examples of Femen protests against religious institutions are:

Amina Tyler case edit

Amina Tyler (real name Amina Sboui), a Tunisian Femen activist, was arrested on 19 May 2013 in Tunis. International protests followed for her release from detention. On 12 June 2013 a Tunisian judge convicted two French Femen members and one German Femen member after they were charged with public indecency while protesting for the release of Tyler.[11] Pauline Hillier, Marguerite Stern and Josephine Markmann were released on 26 June 2013 after a Tunisian court lifted their prison sentence.[132]

Amina Tyler was acquitted for contempt and defamation on 29 July 2013; but she remained jailed pending trial on a separate charge of desecrating a cemetery.[4]

Femen had staged protests in front of the Grand Mosque of Paris burning a Tawhid flag. Amina upon release in August 2013 from detention in a Tunisian jail declared she was leaving the group in protest adding that she thought FEMEN's actions in Paris were disrespectful to the Muslim world and because she saw a lack of financial transparency in the organization.[133]

Cultural and political image edit

 
FEMEN mono-protest at the 5th Odesa International Film Festival in support of the Ukrainian pilot Nadiya Savchenko, who was captured by East Ukrainian insurgents and arrested in Russia, July 2014

Critics have stated Femen members are more interested in self-promotion than real reform, and that their antics are often tacky and undermine the cause of their protests.[102] According to Ukrainian gender studies expert Tetyana Bureychak, most Ukrainian women are unimpressed by Femen.[134] Ukrainian sociologist Oleh Demkiv has spoken out against the controversial nature of FEMEN's protests and in July 2011 he stated they "unfortunately, do not enjoy popular support, or lead to changes in Ukraine's consciousness".[135] In February 2013 Joanna Rohozinska (from National Endowment for Democracy) stated "there is little evidence of any of Femen's protests having significant impact" and she called FEMEN's decision to set up branches in outside Ukraine "as disingenuous at best and, frankly, somewhat cowardly".[78] Positive remarks in Ukraine about Femen came from Maria Mayerchyk (of Lviv University), who has spoken about Femen, saying that they are a "positive, radical and important phenomenon that is able to raise social issues",[134] and Larysa Kobelianska (UN-led women's rights program) said the group has succeeded in attracting public attention to women's problems, even if by questionable means.[20][136]

The group is seen more positively abroad.[8] Naomi Westland wrote that "Western countries are more accustomed than those in the Eastern Hemisphere to seeing naked or semi-naked bodies in the media and on the streets. But in countries where nudity is taboo, the protests have more profound impact."[137] Jeffrey Tayler noted: "Femen originated in Ukraine, born of young women who grew up without exposure to the West's culture of political correctness and who have scant respect for it; from their country's Soviet past, they know how deleterious the stifling of free speech can be. Now that they have moved to the West, Femen has courageously broken rules and enlivened the debate over religion's role in our world."[138] Femen received a positive reception after opening their location in Paris.[139]

In September 2013, Femen came under criticism when an Australian documentary filmmaker Kitty Green exposed a man named Victor Svyatski as the founder of the group.[15] Svyatski was previously known as only a consultant to the movement.[140]

Financing edit

 
Femen founder Anna Hutsol watches a Femen demonstration with DJ Hell in Kyiv on 22 May 2009.

Femen activists earn funding through the sale of products bearing the Femen logo.[141] Femen also receives donations from individuals[20][39][142] like Helmut Geier (also known as DJ under the alias DJ Hell),[45] German businesswoman Beate Schober (who is currently residing in Ukraine),[143] the American businessman Jed Sunden (founder of Ukrainian KP Media and former owner of Kyiv Post newspaper)[1][144] and Ukrainian Canadians.[98]

In March 2012 Ukrainian magazine Focus said that Femen activists receive royalties for foreign interviews and in the tabloids.[41] In the magazine Anna Hutsol confirmed that a rally in Istanbul was sponsored by a Turkish company producing underwear.[41]

A Ukrainian 1+1 journalist, who claimed (in September 2012) to have infiltrated the organization, says that its office in the Ukrainian capital, Kyiv, costs the movement over $2,500 per month, on top of which each member's salary was roughly per month.[citation needed]

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Ackerman, Galia; et al., Femen, Published by Calmann-Lévy (Paris 2013), 280 pages. ISBN 978-2702144589. (French language publication)[60]
  • Ceresa, Massimo (15 December 2015). Femen, Inna e le altre streghe senza Dio [Femen, Inna and the other godless witches.] (in Italian). Lucca: Tra le righe libri. ISBN 978-8899141370.
  • Goujon, Olivier (21 September 2017). Femen: Histoire d'une trahison [Femen: History of a Betrayal] (in French). Paris: Max Milo Editions. ISBN 978-2315008186. Published by Max Milo Editions (Paris), 364 pages. (French language publication)

Filmography edit

  • Nos seins, nos armes ! (Our breasts, our weapons!), documentary film (1hour 10 mins), written and directed by Caroline Fourest and Nadia El Fani, produced by Nilaya Productions, aired on France 2 on 5 March 2013.[145]
  • Everyday Rebellion, documentary film (1hour 58 mins), written and directed by the Riahi Brothers Arash T. Riahi and Arman Riahi, Austria / Switzerland / Germany, 2013, world premiere at Copenhagen International Documentary Festival on 13 November 2013.
  • Ukraine Is Not a Brothel
  • Je Suis Femen (I Am Femen), 2014, documentary film, written and directed by Alain Margot.[146]
  • FEMEN: Sextremism in Canada, 2016, documentary film, examining the group in Québec, Canada.[147]

Notes and references edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ On 19 December 2011 FEMEN performed a topless protest against Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko outside the KGB Headquarters in Minsk, mocking Lukashenko's recognizable haircut and moustache. Afterwards, according to FEMEN, the three protesters Inna Shevchenko, Oksana Shachko and Aleksandra Nemchinova were abducted by the Belarus authorities and taken to a remote forest blindfolded, doused with oil, forced to strip and then threatened with being set on fire, before having their hair violently cut with knives and being abandoned in the snow half-naked.[25][26]
  2. ^ Early September 2013 Inna Shevchenko stated that FEMEN had "broke free" of Sviatsky.[16]
  3. ^ On 28 August 2013 a Kyiv police spokesperson stated no one in the group had been charged but the criminal probe into illegal possession of weapons by the group continued and the women could be called in for further questioning.[51]
  4. ^ The reason given on its Facebook page was: "disagreement about the internal organization within the international movement Femen".[73]
  5. ^ As a counter-act Polish prostitutes held their own nude demonstration (in masks) with the catchphrase "Femen! Get the fuck out of our business".[92]
  6. ^ The desecration of the cross was repudiated by Maria Alyokhina of Pussy Riot, who said "Their surprise displays and protests against authoritarianism are similar to us, but we look at feminism differently, especially the form of speech. We wouldn't take our clothes off, and will not. Their latest action, the sawing of the cross, does not create a feeling of solidarity, unfortunately."[114]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f "Femen wants to move from public exposure to political power". Kyiv Post. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  2. ^ a b FEMEN: FEMEN – is a global women's movement, Official FEMEN website
  3. ^ a b c Eichhorn, Lorenz (19 September 2012). "Naked March in Paris to Open New Office of Femen Feminist Group – SPIEGEL ONLINE". Der Spiegel. Retrieved 19 November 2012.
  4. ^ a b Tunisian Femen activist ‘acquitted’ of defamation, France 24 (29 July 2013)
    Court dismisses 1 charge against Tunisian feminist, TimesDaily (29 July 2013)
    Tunisian Activist Acquitted Amid Growing Unrest, Voice of America (29 July 2013) "Tunisian Femen activist 'acquitted' of defamation". France 24. 29 July 2013. Archived from the original on 5 November 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
  5. ^ a b "FEMEN". FEMEN. 24 January 2013. Archived from the original on 9 May 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  6. ^ a b "Ukraine's Ladies of Femen". Movements.org. 16 August 2011. Archived from the original on 14 April 2012. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  7. ^ Tayler, Jeffrey (13 March 2013). "The Woman Behind Femen's Topless Protest Movement". The Atlantic. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  8. ^ a b c d e f "Ukraine's Femen: Topless protests 'help feminist cause'". BBC News. 22 October 2012. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  9. ^ "Topless FEMEN Protesters Drench Belgian Archbishop André-Jozef Léonard, Protest Homophobia in Catholic Church (PHOTOS)". Huffington Post. 24 April 2013. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  10. ^ Reestorff, Camilla Møhring (2018). The Routledge companion to media and activism. New York: Routledge. ISBN 9781138202030. The activist movement Femen is notorious for topless protests and the ideology 'sextremism, atheism and feminism'.
  11. ^ a b c d "Femen activists jailed in Tunisia for topless protest". BBC News. 12 June 2013. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  12. ^ a b c Holman, Zoe (19 October 2013). "Fearless … and topless: Femen activists to bring 'sextremism' to the UK". The Observer. ISSN 0029-7712. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  13. ^ a b c "Feminine Femen targets 'sexpats'". Get the Latest Ukraine News Today - KyivPost. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  14. ^ "How they protest prostitution in Ukraine". France 24. 28 August 2009. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  15. ^ a b MacNab, Geoffrey (3 September 2013). "The man who made Femen: New film outs Victor Svyatski as the mastermind behind the protest group and its breast-baring stunts". The Independent. London. Retrieved 23 March 2015.
  16. ^ a b Shevchenko, Inna (5 September 2013). "Femen let Victor Svyatski take over because we didn't know how to fight it". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 26 June 2023.
  17. ^ McNabb, Geoffrey (17 January 2014). "'I don't want to be liked': Inna Shevchenko, leader of women's rights group Femen, talks dictators, documentaries and death threats". The Independent. London. Retrieved 19 January 2014.
  18. ^ (in French) Femen Les féministes venues du froid Archived 10 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine, Paris Match (18 February 2012)
  19. ^ Ortiz, Isabel; Burke, Sara; Berrada, Mohamed; Saenz Cortés, Hernán (2022). World Protests: A Study of Key Protest Issues in the 21st Century. Cham: Springer International Publishing. p. 44. ISBN 978-3-030-88512-0.
  20. ^ a b c d Topless protesters gain fame in Ukraine, Associated Press (19 November 2010) Archived 1 February 2012 at the Wayback Machine
  21. ^ http://kyivconnexions.blogspot.com/2011_02_01_archive.html[dead link]
  22. ^ "Unorthodox protest in Ukraine: Indecent exposure". The Economist. 20 May 2011. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  23. ^ Bidder, Benjamin (5 May 2011). "Kyiv's Topless Protestors: 'The Entire Ukraine Is a Brothel'". Spiegel Online. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  24. ^ "Des féministes ukrainiennes manifestent contre DSK". L'Express. 1 November 2011. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
    "Ukrainian Femen Protesters – Irish Independent Galleries". Photos.independent.ie. 5 November 2011. Archived from the original on 21 June 2012. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
    "Bikyamasr: Ukraine woman strips at Vatican for rights, anti-Berlusconi". Kyivpost.com. 7 November 2011. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
    "FEMEN – Zurich is not a Brothel! (NSFW)". Mizozo.com. Archived from the original on 16 April 2013. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
    "'Femen' Stage Naked Protest Against Putin in Moscow [PHOTOS] – IBTimes UK". Ibtimes.co.uk. 9 December 2011. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  25. ^ a b "Ukrainian Activists Allegedly Kidnapped, Terrorized in Belarus Found". RFE/RL. 20 December 2011. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  26. ^ "Trio 'abducted and abused' for Belarus topless protest". BBC. 20 December 2011. Retrieved 13 January 2013.
  27. ^ a b c Connolly, Kate (12 April 2013). "Femen activist tells how protest against Putin and Merkel was planned". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
  28. ^ a b Cochrane, Kira (20 March 2013). "Rise of the naked female warriors". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 22 April 2013.
  29. ^ a b c Femen leader points to ‘Russian fingerprints’ in recent attacks on group’s activists in Kyiv, Interfax-Ukraine (29 July 2013)
    FEMEN says their male activist brutally beaten up by security services, Interfax-Ukraine (25 July 2013)
    Fined Femen activists planned protest against Putin Archived 12 November 2013 at the Wayback Machine, Ukrinform (29 July 2013)
    State Leaders, Orthodox Clergy Mark Kyivan Rus Anniversary, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty (27 July 2013)
    'Attacks were meant to intimidate us': Femen, Deutsche Welle (29 July 2013) "Femen leader points to 'Russian fingerprints' in recent attacks on group's activists in Kyiv". Interfax News Wire. 29 July 2013. Archived from the original on 15 September 2013. Retrieved 30 July 2013.
  30. ^ "Femen co-founder Oksana Shachko found dead in Paris flat". The Guardian. Agence France-Presse. 24 July 2018. Retrieved 27 July 2018.
  31. ^ a b "Bare-chested protesters take on Berlin". DW.DE. 26 February 2013. Retrieved 12 November 2013.
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External links edit

  • Official website  
  • Femen blog
  • BlaqSwans.org – an analysis of the Femen movement
  • Femen on Twitter
  • Femen on Facebook