anthony and elizabeth cady satan to talk about gender. i said, well, that is problematic, too, because, as we know in the southridge movement, there was marginalization of african- american women. other women of color did not even appear. native american women were not included in women's suffrage. so how do we then have a conversation about gender that racialized.onalize so i started to thinking about that. what is our metaphor for equality that does not rely on the domination or racialization. how do we have a conversation about equality? and there is one element that looms hard in the quality is home. it is the establishing of a place that one calls their own. when we talk about stories like a " a raisin in the sun" and they talk about how important the home is and in african- american equality -- for those of you who do not know the play, there is a much more popular cultural reference which you may know, which is "the jeffersons." if you watched television in the 1970's, and in order to show that the jeffersons had made it, what did