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Lorraine Hansberry's play, "A Raisin in the Sun," debuted on Broadway in 1959, New York, NY, US.

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Pictured are The Guerrilla Girls, anonymous artist activists who use disruptive headlines, outrageous visuals and killer statistics to expose gender and ethnic bias and corruption in art, film, politics and pop culture.

The Guerrilla Girls are anonymous artist activists who use disruptive headlines, outrageous visuals and killer statistics to expose gender and ethnic bias and corruption in art, film, politics and pop culture.

Pictured is American artist Judy Chicago with her quote, "My art is political because I am political."
"Middlemarch" by George Eliot.

As a woman in a male-dominated literary world, Mary Ann Evans adopted a male pen name, George Eliot, to ensure her works were taken seriously and to avoid the prejudices of the time against female authors. She explored complex themes such as the nature of love, faith, politics, and women's roles in society. Her novel "Middlemarch" (1871-1872) critiqued the limitations of class and gender and she became one of the most influential English novelists of her time.