WomanSpirit
Frequency | Quarterly |
---|---|
Circulation | 3,000 |
First issue | 1974 |
Final issue | 1984 |
Based in | Wolf Creek, Oregon |
Language | English |
Website | http://www.womanspirit.ws/ |
OCLC | 3113446 |
WomanSpirit (Fall 1974 - Summer 1984) was a lesbian feminist quarterly founded by Ruth and Jean Mountaingrove and produced collectively near Wolf Creek, Oregon. It was the first American lesbian/feminist periodical to be dedicated to both feminism and spirituality.[1][2] Many of the contributors to WomanSpirit were, or became, well known within the women's spirituality movement.[3] It had 40 publications, covering topics such as ecology, goddess myths and rituals, feminist theory, and divination. Its submissions included articles, photos, letters, book reviews, artwork, and songs.[4]
History
WomanSpirit was founded by Ruth and Jean Mountaingrove in 1974, who had a vision for a magazine that was "international and radical feminist. We wanted a cultural revolution—a total reordering of institutions and values. It was to be a modest magazine with grand goals."[5] In 1978, they bought and moved to Rootworks, their lesbian land. From 1979 to 1984, they produced Womanspirit in the barn they built ("Natalie Barney"). Women who came to work on the different issues could stay on the land for however long they needed to or could.[6]
Impact
At the height of WomanSpirit's circulation, it was distributed to 91 women's bookstores, 10 countries, and had over 3,000 subscribers.[3][5] The existence of Rootworks and WomanSpirit has been credited by many women for bringing them into rural Oregon to participate in the women's land movement.[7]
After it folded, Jean Mountaingrove suggested that an index be made and Christine Menefee offered to make one.[8] It was published in 1989[9] and is out of print, but has been useful for researching feminist and women's history.[8]
Notable contributors
See also
References
- ^ Long, Linda; Gage, Carolyn (2008). "A Lesbian Archivist Discovers A Hidden Literary Treasure in Southern Oregon". The Lambda Book Report.
- ^ Christ, Carol (2000). "Womanspirit". In Kramarae, Cheris; Spender, Dale (eds.). Routledge International Encyclopedia of Women: Global Women's Issues. Routledge. pp. 2050–2051. ISBN 9780415920889.
- ^ a b Griffin, Wendy. "The Land Within". Retrieved 3 January 2018.
- ^ "WomanSpirit". WomanSpirit. 2008. Archived from the original on 18 September 2017. Retrieved 3 January 2018.
- ^ a b Summerhawk, Barbara; Gagehabib, La Verne (2000). "3 Political Circles: Shaping a Community's Response". Circles of Power: Shifting Dynamics in a Lesbian-centered Community. Norwich, VT: New Victoria. p. 68. ISBN 9781892281135.
- ^ Mountaingrove, Ruth; Mountaingrove, Jean (1985). "Rootworks". In Cheney, Joyce (ed.). Lesbian Land. Minneapolis, Minn: Word Weavers. pp. 125–128. LCCN 85016866.
- ^ Burmeister, Heather Jo (2013). Rural Revolution: Documenting the Lesbian Land Communities of Southern Oregon (Masters thesis). Portland State University. doi:10.15760/etd.1080.
- ^ a b Menefee, Christine (2011). "The WomanSpirit Index".
- ^ Menefee, Christine (1989). Womanspirit Index: Your Comprehensive Guide to the Decade of Women's Spirituality, 1974-1984. ISBN 978-0962103513.
Further reading
- WomanSpirit archives hosted by Reveal Digital
- Grosjean, Shelley. "A "Womyn's" Work is Never Done: The Gendered Division of Labor and the Creation of Southern Oregon Lesbian Separatist Communities". University of Oregon.
- v
- t
- e
- Paula Gunn Allen
- Dorothy Allison
- Ti-Grace Atkinson
- Alison Bechdel
- Evelyn Torton Beck
- Miriam Ben-Shalom
- Julie Bindel
- Ivy Bottini
- Charlotte Bunch
- Cheryl Clarke
- Michelle Cliff
- Kate Clinton
- Jeanne Córdova
- Mary Daly
- Max Dashu
- Stormé DeLarverie
- Diane DiMassa
- Alix Dobkin
- Andrea Dworkin
- Elana Dykewomon
- Lillian Faderman
- Ferron
- Marilyn Frye
- Michiyo Fukaya
- Carolyn Gage
- Donna Gottschalk
- Sarah Hoagland
- Karla Jay
- Sheila Jeffreys
- Jill Johnston
- Melanie Kaye/Kantrowitz
- Joan Larkin
- Anna Livia
- Audre Lorde
- Del Martin and Phyllis Lyon
- Cherríe Moraga
- Bonnie J. Morris
- Ruth Mountaingrove
- Jean O'Leary
- Pat Parker
- Julia Penelope
- Janice Raymond
- Adrienne Rich
- Margaret Sloan-Hunter
- Barbara Smith
- Cris Williamson
- Monique Wittig
- Bonnie Zimmerman
- AMASONG
- Amazon Bookstore Cooperative
- Anjaree
- Artemis Singers
- Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance
- Bi-National Lesbian Conference
- Chicago Lesbian Liberation
- Combahee River Collective
- Connexxus Women's Center/Centro de Mujeres
- Daughters of Bilitis
- Daughters of Bilitis (Australia)
- The Feminists
- First Black Lesbian Conference
- The Furies Collective
- Gay Women's Alternative
- Gouines rouges
- June L. Mazer Lesbian Archives
- Lavender Menace
- Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group
- Lesbian Art Project
- Lesbian Avengers
- Lesbian Feminist Liberation
- Lesbian Herstory Archives
- Lesbian Movement (Denmark)
- Lesbian Organization of Toronto
- Lesbians Against Pit Closures
- Lincoln Legion of Lesbians
- Mujeres Creando
- Oregon Women's Land Trust
- Salsa Soul Sisters
- Sister Spit
- Sisters for Homophile Equality
- Van Dykes
- Butch
- Butch and femme
- Compulsory heterosexuality
- Corrective rape
- Dyke
- Feminist separatism
- Femme
- Gender-critical feminism
- Lesbian bed death
- Lesbian erasure
- Lesbian feminism
- Lesbians in Francoist Spain
- Lesbians in the Spanish Second Republic
- Lesbophobia
- Lipstick lesbian
- Political lesbianism
- Radical lesbianism
- Soft butch
- Stone butch
- Stone femme
- U-Haul lesbian
- Womyn-born womyn
- Womyn's land
Books |
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Other |
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- Cineffable
- Dyke march
- Lesbian bar
- Lesbian flags
- Lesbian literature
- Lesbian pulp fiction
- Maud's (bar)
- Michigan Womyn's Music Festival
- Motherpeace Tarot
- Mountain Moving Coffeehouse
- Olivia Records
- Paris Lesbian and Feminist Film Festival
- Peg's Place (bar)
- Some Prefer Cake
- Women's music
- Women's Week Provincetown