How do so many women survive the violence of their daily lives? Where do they find hope? How can this violence be allowed to continue? A long-needed book, Shout Out contains a powerful collection of writing by women who are contemplating and striving to answer these very troubling questions.
Shout Out addresses a range of responses to the injustices that women everywhere are sustaining in their daily lives: physical abuse, murder, rape, poverty, and psychological terror. Through critical examinations, creative nonfiction, and poetry, the contributors provide living testimony for the need to put an end to oppression and violence.
About
María Ochoa 
María Ochoa, PhD, is a writer who teaches at San José State
University in the Department
of Social Science/Women’s Studies Program.
Recent publications include the books Voices of Russell City: An
Oral History About a Town and its People and Creative Collectives:
Chicana Artists Working in Community, as well as poetry in the anthology Oakland
Out Loud. She is the producer/director of the video Voices of
Russell City: The Annual Reunion Picnic. In 1999 the California State Assembly
honored her as a Woman of the Year for her contributions to the arts.
About Barbara K. Ige
Barbara K. Ige, PhD, has at every stage of her academic and administrative
career demonstrated an unwavering commitment to diversifying the student
population. She has taught multicultural North American literature, Asian
American studies, and popular culture at the University of Hawai'i, Pitzer
College, and the University of California in Santa Cruz, Santa Barbara,
and Los Angeles.
Contributors


