Ms. Blogger
Ms.
When Ms. was launched as a “one-shot” sample insert in New York Magazine in December 1971, few realized it would become the landmark institution in both women’s rights and American journalism that it is today.
The founders of Ms., many of whom are now household names, helped to shape contemporary feminism. According to founding editor Letty Cottin Pogrebin, Ms.’ authors translated “a movement into a magazine.”
Website: http://msmagazine.com
Twitter: msmagazine
Ms.'s Posts
10 Feminist Gift Ideas for the Holidays
December 16, 2011 by Ms. · 3 Comments
Looking to spread some feminist cheer this holiday? We’ve got you covered! Check out these ideas: 1. The Gift of Ms.! Let’s start with our top pick for everyone on your list, a full year of Ms. or a membership renewal. Sure, we’re a little biased, but right now all memberships are 50 percent off, [...]
Filed under Ms.cellany · Tagged with Feminist Gifts, Feministing, Heifer International, Holidays, Just Detention International
Everyone Has the Right to Occupy Space, Safely
November 10, 2011 by Ms. · 3 Comments
One inadvertent effect of the Occupy movement has been to call attention to the fact that public space is not always safe space for women, nor for queer and trans people. Fittingly, anti-street-harassment group Hollaback! has stepped up to tackle the issue of sexual violence at Occupy. In a official statement written collectively with Occupied Wall [...]
Filed under Activism, National · Tagged with #OccupyWallSt, Hollaback, Occupy, Occupy Wall Street, Street Harassment
40 Years of Ms. … And Counting
This week, we’re proud to say Ms. magazine is featured on the cover of New York magazine, the place where it all started 40 years ago this December. That’s when New York‘s editor Clay Felker offered to make the very first issue of Ms. an insert in his magazine, where Gloria Steinem was a staff [...]
Filed under Ms.cellany · Tagged with 40th Anniversary of Ms., Alice Walker, FBI, Gloria Steinem, Harriet Lyons, Joanne Edgar, Lindsy Van Gelder, Marcia Gillespie, Marianas Islands, Mary Peacock, Mary Thom, New York Magazine, Nora Ephron, Rape is Rape
#HERvotes Blog Carnival Takes on Health Care
October 11, 2011 by Ms. · Leave a Comment
Welcome to the third #HERvotes Blog Carnival! This time, the focus is on women and health care. The blog posts below contain lots of information about the new benefits from the Affordable Care Act, and offer original insights on what’s at stake for women–especially in the 2012 election. You’ll also find personal stories and analysis [...]
Filed under HERvotes Health · Tagged with #HERvotes, 2012 Election, Affordable Care Act, health care
Ms. Readers’ 100 Best Non-Fiction Books of All Time: The Top 10 and the Complete List!
October 10, 2011 by Ms. · 36 Comments
Scholar, activist, provocateur, teacher, community-builder, inspiration: No one word can span the career of bell hooks or capture how much we love her work. According to Ms. readers’ selections of the best feminist non-fiction of all time, she’s your favorite writer, with three books in our top ten–including number one–and a total of seven books [...]
Filed under Arts, Books · Tagged with Ariel Levy, Audre Lorde, Barbara Ehrenreich, bell hooks, Inga Muscio, Jessica Valenti, Susan Faludi, Top 100 Feminist Non-Fiction, Virginia Woolf
Top 100 Feminist Non-Fiction Countdown: 20-11
October 8, 2011 by Ms. · 2 Comments
Nearing the top 10, we’ve got some heavy hitters. Famous feminists Simone De Beauvoir, Betty Friedan, Naomi Wolf, Eve Ensler and Jessica Valenti appear along with revolutionary self-help manual, Our Bodies, Ourselves, and popular books by Julia Serano, Marjane Satrapi and Yoani Sanchez. Now is the time to submit your guesses in the comments [...]
Filed under Arts, Books · Tagged with Betty Friedan, Boston Women's Health Collective, Eve Ensler, Full Frontal Feminism, Havana Real, Jaclyn Friedman, Jessica Valenti, Julia Serano, Marjane Satrapi, Naomi Wolf, Our Bodies Ourselves, Persepolis, Simone de Beauvoir, The Feminine Mystique, The Second Sex, The Vagina Monologues, Top 100 Feminist Non-Fiction, V-Day, Yes Means Yes, Yoani Sanchez
Afghan Woman Legislator’s Hunger Strike Reaches Day Six
Today, Simin Barakzai reached her sixth consecutive day of a hunger strike to the death in a tent in front of the Afghan parliament building. [Update, Monday 10/10: On day nine, Barakzai is still refusing water or food and is in critical condition.] Barakzai, a member of parliament from Herat, is camped out to protest [...]
Filed under Global, South Asia · Tagged with Afghan Women and Girls, Afghanistan, Herat, Hunger Strike, Parliament, President Karzai, Simin Barakzai, voter fraud
Top 100 Feminist Non-Fiction Countdown: 30-21
October 7, 2011 by Ms. · 4 Comments
Many of books 21 to 30 were famous for challenging the status quo–whether that be male supremacy in general or privilege within the feminist movement. In this section you’ll find the defining works of Chicana, women-of-color and third-wave feminism (as well as one landmark anthology at the intersection of all three). Last, two 21st-century historians [...]
Filed under Arts, Books · Tagged with Amy Richards, Cherrie Moraga, Cristina Page, Daisy Hernandez, Gail Collins, Gloria Anzaldua, Gloria Steinem, Jennifer Baumgardner, Kate Millett, Mary Wollstonecraft, Maya Angelou, Pro-Choice, This Bridge Called My Back, Top 100 Feminist Non-Fiction
Top 100 Feminist Non-Fiction Countdown: 40-31
October 6, 2011 by Ms. · 2 Comments
As we get closer to the top, here are career-defining works from the likes of Angela Y. Davis, Kate Bornstein, Sheryl WuDunn and Nicholas Kristof, Patricia Hill Collins, Susie Orbach and Mary Pipher. If you’ve heard of these folks, it’s probably because of the books below. If you haven’t, you have some great reading ahead! [...]
Filed under Arts, Books · Tagged with Andi Zeisler, Angela Davis, Black Feminists, Gender Outlaws, Gender Trouble, Gloria Steinem, Judith Butler, Kate Bornstein, Mary Pipher, Nicholas D. Kristof, Patricia Hill Collins, Reviving Ophelia, Riot Grrrl, Sara Marcus, Sheryl WuDunn, Susie Orbach, Top 100 Feminist Non-Fiction
Top 100 Feminist Non-Fiction Countdown: 50-41
October 5, 2011 by Ms. · Leave a Comment
Within books 50 to 41, you’ll find several controversial takes on motherhood and many a memoir, including a reflection on the personal impact of breast cancer, a graphic autobiography from a dyke to watch out for and some gutsy revelations from a Nation columnist. You’ll also see a satire of how the patriarchy tries to dampen [...]
Filed under Arts, Books · Tagged with Adrienne Rich, Alison Bechdel, Audre Lorde, bell hooks, Communion: The Female Search for Love, Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic, How to Suppress Women’s Writing, INCITE! Women of Color Against Violence, Joanna Russ, Katha Pollitt, Learning to Drive: And Other Life Stories, Michelle Goldberg, Of Woman Born: Motherhood as Experience and Institution, Shulamith Firestone, Staying Alive: Women Ecology and Development, The Color of Violence: The Incite! Anthology, The Dialectic of Sex: The Case for Feminist Revolution, The Means of Reproduction: Sex Power and the Future of the World, Top 100 Feminist Non-Fiction, Vandana Shiva, Zami: A New Spelling of My Name




