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The 1970s ushered in a period of significant feminist activism, public debate and judicial reform on issues of rape and child sexual abuse. In this article, I examine how The Australian Women's Weekly raised and navigated the issue of rape from its commercial position as a conservative-leaning publication between 1970 and 1982. It seeks to understand mainstream Australian women's attitudes towards sexual assault and how they evolved under emerging feminist critique.
Zara Saunders (Mon,) studied this question.