Sheila Rowbotham, Lyn Segal and Hilary Wainwright were involved organising a conference, eventually a book: Beyond the fragments - Feminism and the making of socialism (1979). A revised edition appeared in 2013.
Rowbotham, Segal & Wainwright (2013), *Beyond the fragments - Feminism and the making of socialism*, revised edition [website](https://leftbookclub.com/books/beyond-the-fragments/)
> ā A generation ago we wrote Beyond the Fragments. Inspired by the activism of the 1970s, and facing the imminent triumph of the right under Margaret Thatcher, we sought to apply our experiences as feminists to creating stronger bonds of solidarity in a new kind of left movement. Since then the obstacles facing us have grown formidably; deepening recession, environmental pollution, falling real wages and savage welfare cuts. New forms of resistance have appeared, but how are they to coalesce? In our three new essays to this new edition we return to the fraught question of how to consolidate diverse upsurges of rebellion into effective, open democratic left coalitions.
Cockburn (2013), "Beyond the Fragments": Iām a socialist feminist. Can I be a radical feminist too? [blog](https://www.opendemocracy.net/en/5050/beyond-fragments-im-socialist-feminist-can-i-be-radical-feminist-too/) > ā BTF has become paradigmatic of socialist feminism. The subtitle of the new book, as of the old, is Feminism and the Making of Socialism. Yet, feeling myself to be irreducibly both a socialist feminist and a radical feminist, the project leaves me a little riven and adrift. Its authors embrace a generous multiplicity of socialisms, yet bring into play only an impoverished version of feminism. I fear that in an important attempt to heal the divisions of the left it may marginalize those feminists who feel themselves to be not only anticapitalist but also antipatriarchal.