As an undergraduate, Atkinson read
Simone de Beauvoir's
The Second Sex, and struck up a correspondence with Beauvoir, who suggested that she contact
Betty Friedan. Atkinson became an early member of the National Organization for Women, which Friedan had co-founded, serving on the national board, and becoming the New York chapter president in 1967. Her time with the organization was tumultuous, including a row with the national leadership over her attempts to defend and promote
Valerie Solanas and her
SCUM Manifesto in the wake of the
Andy Warhol shooting. , November 4, 1970 In 1968, she became critical of the organization's inability to confront issues like
abortion and marriage inequalities; she also felt it replicated patriarchal power structures, and resigned from her presidency after her proposal to abolish NOW's executive offices was defeated in a vote. She founded the October 17th Movement, named for the date of her resignation, which would later become The Feminists, a radical feminist group active until 1973; however, she left the group in 1971 when the group barred its members from speaking to the press. Atkinson led and participated in protests against
Richard Nixon, the
Manhattan Marriage Bureau, and gender-segregated classified ads in the
New York Times. She advocated for more violent means of activism, and publicly admired the Italian-American Unity League and the
Weathermen. Her book
Amazon Odyssey was published in 1974. Atkinson was involved with Sagaris, an experimental feminist summer school in Lyndonville, Vermont, in the 1970s, but left the organization with several other faculty members after the school accepted a grant from
Ms. Magazine. In 1971,
Patricia Buckley Bozell, a Catholic and conservative activist, slapped or attempted to slap (unclear if physical contact was actually made) Atkinson after the latter made what Bozell described as "an illiterate harangue against the mystical body of Christ". The incident occurred on the platform of
Catholic University of America's auditorium while Atkinson was discussing the virginity of the
Virgin Mary. "Sisterhood", Atkinson famously said in her 1971 resignation from the Feminists, "is powerful. It kills. Mostly sisters." In 2013, Atkinson, along with
Carol Hanisch, Kathy Scarbrough, and
Kathie Sarachild, initiated "Forbidden Discourse: The Silencing of Feminist Criticism of 'Gender'", which they described as an "open statement from 48 radical feminists from seven countries". In August 2014,
Michelle Goldberg in
The New Yorker described it as expressing their "alarm" at "threats and attacks, some of them physical, on individuals and organizations daring to challenge the currently fashionable concept of gender." ==Bibliography==