'what incident/article/moment made you feel the way you currently do?'
My mum and godmother were feminists. They talked about feminism and I eavesdropped. I read mum's copy of 'the female eunuch' when I was 14.
Plus I never lost that child-like sense of fairness and I think sexism is one of the most obviously unfair things around, along with racism which I also fight against.
I like feminist discussions that evolve around the group's lived experiences, and that acknowledge we're all different and have different opinions and barriers.
Sometimes I do a group exercise where I draw a bird cage and get women to write the different bars on it - different manifestations of women's oppression. Women always have something to put on that piece of paper. One woman might have nearly lost her gran to female infanticide. One might fear forced marriage. One might be angry she couldn't play football as a girl. Everyone has different stories but all aspects of the same whole.
The exercise is based on this essay
people.terry.uga.edu/dawndba/4500Oppression.html
'Consider a birdcage. If you look very closely at just one wire in the cage, you cannot see the other wires. If your conception of what is before you is determined by this myopic focus, you could look at that one wire, up and down the length of it, and be unable to see why a bird would not just fly around the wire any time it wanted to go somewhere. Furthermore, even if, one day at a time, you myopically inspected each wire, you still could not see why a bird would gave trouble going past the wires to get anywhere. There is no physical property of any one wire, nothing that the closest scrutiny could discover, that will reveal how a bird could be inhibited or harmed by it except in the most accidental way. It is only when you step back, stop looking at the wires one by one, microscopically, and take a macroscopic view of the whole cage, that you can see why the bird does not go anywhere; and then you will see it in a moment.'
I don't know if it's really out-there or not, as it's been a long time since feminist writing seemed out-there to me. Not meaning that to sound like a boast - I'd quite like to be able to remember!
But I remember Kat Banyard's writing was very convincing. And Pornland by Gail Dines.