EVENT

Planet Patriarchy w/ Rahila Gupta

24 Oct 2025 – 18:00 BST
Watershed, Bristol
Room W2
1 Canons Road
Harbourside
Bristol
BS1 5TX

Join this Public Sociology event for the opportunity to hear from feminist thinker Rahila Gupta on publication of her new book Planet Patriarchy.

This in-conversation event will cover how patriarchy fluxes and changes around the world, and how feminism resists and triumphs. Covering case studies from the women’s revolution in Rojava, in North East Syria, through to stories from China, Russia, Iceland and many more. Interviews with feminists active in these countries show how global politics have shaped the rollback of women’s rights and what women are doing to maintain what has been won while continuing to imagine what could be.

About the book

In 1995, the UN vowed to advance ‘equality, development and peace for all women, everywhere.’ Instead, in the Beijing Declaration’s thirtieth anniversary year, the world is lurching dangerously away from such democratic and progressive ideals—reinventing nationalist identities based on toxic-masculine values, and embracing economic policies against women’s interests. This reality exists in every type of country. Why does oppression, rather than feminism, still dominate our world?

This book reveals patriarchy’s many faces in the age of globalisation, exploring the political systems and cultures of eight very different societies. It takes readers from the extraordinary anti-capitalist women’s revolution in Kurdistan to the theocracies of Islamic State and Saudi Arabia; from China’s one-party state to Iceland’s democracy; and to South Africa, Russia and El Salvador—all radically changed since the fall of apartheid, communism and military dictatorship respectively.

Despite patriarchy’s remarkable shapeshifting powers to undermine feminist solidarity, Planet Patriarchy is equally a story of sisterhood and resistance, interviewing defenders of women’s rights about their cause and their country. Gender inequality endures, everywhere—but so does feminism. Campbell and Gupta’s fascinating discoveries show us how this timeless showdown is taking shape in, and being shaped by, the systems we live under today.

About the authors

Rahila Gupta is a freelance journalist, author and activist, and Chair of Southall Black Sisters, which campaigns for Black/Global South women escaping violence in the UK.

Beatrix Campbell OBE is a writer, broadcaster and playwright, and recipient of several honorary doctorates. Her pathbreaking Wigan Pier Revisited won the Cheltenham Festival Prize.

 

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