Women’s Press
Press published by Women’s Press Collective, Eugene Oregon PO Box 562 Eugene
Years: 1970 -
Right: Cover of first issue December 1970
Lower Left front cover of March 1971 issue.
Below Right: Ad in Oregon Liberator November 1975
citations & references:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Women%27s_Press It should be noted that there was a publishing company also named The Women’s Press. The Women's Press. The Women's Press was a feminist publishing company established in London in 1977. Throughout the late 1970s and the 1980s, the Women's Press was a highly visible presence, publishing feminist literature.
Per https://findatwiki.com/Women%27s_Press_Collective#cite_note-Garber,_Linda_2001,_p._32-7
Judy Grahn was a member of the Gay Women's Liberation Group, GWLG, the first lesbian-feminist collective on the West Coast, founded in 1969. Grahn and her partner, artist Wendy Cadden, produced books, poems, and graphics. This contributed the basis of the Women's Press Collective (WPC), which strived to devote "itself exclusively to work by lesbians disfranchised by race or class". GWLG is also responsible for founding the women's bookstore A Woman's Place.
Per https://www.abebooks.com/first-edition/Womens-Press-News-Journal-14-issues/30652189309/bd for sale $400.00 on 4/17/2022. Eugene, OR: Women's Press Collective, 1971 - 1972. Newsprint (16.5 inches by 11.5 inches); variously paginated, most are [16-20] pp. Illustrated throughout. Broken run of newspapers published January 1971 through 1972. All mail folds, as issued. Paper toned. Some minor edgewear. A monthly, and sometimes bi-monthly, feminist periodical founded by Margarita Donnelly and others in December 1970. Roughtly 15 women worked to produce each issue, which addressed a variety of topics such as reproductive rights, access to child care, division of housework, marriage, divorce, sexual assault, and women's liberation in general. Women's Press, alternatively known as Womyn's Press, published well into the 1980s. Donnelly went on to found CALYX Journal in 1976, which actively publishes and supports women authors to this day. Issues included: Vol. 1, No. 2 Jan-Feb, 1971 Vol. 1, No. 3 March 1971 Vol. 1, No. 4 April 1971 Vol. 1, No. 5, May - June 1971 Vol. 1, No. 6, July 1971 Vol. 1, No. 7 August 1971 Vol. 1, No. 8 August 1971 (incorrectly numbered No. 7) Vol. 1, No. 9 October 1971 Vol. 1, No. 11 - 12 December, January 1971/1972 Vol. 1, No. 13, February 1972 Vol. 2, No. 1 March 1972 Vol. 2, No. 2 April 1972 Vol. 2, No. 3 May 1972 Vol. 2, No. 5 August 1972. Seller Inventory # 6313
Under this collection, they state the name as WYMN PRESS not Women’s Press
Womyn's press - Penn State University Libraries Catalog (psu.edu) https://catalog.libraries.psu.edu/catalog/20764759
Per https://womynspress.blogspot.com/
MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 2014
Remembering Mother Kali's Bookstore
Grassroots feminist newspapers such as Women's Press/Womyn's Press were part of a vigorous women-in-print movement that included periodicals, book publishers, distributors, and feminist bookstores. Eugene's feminist bookstore, Mother Kali's, carried on for 33 years, finally closing in 2008. In this public radio interview from a few months ago, longtime bookstore activist Lorraine Ironplow and her partner, Kylene Folsom, remember Mother Kali's.
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MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 2014
Volume One, Number Seven -- August 1971
In August 1971, Women's Press Page One news was a recently concluded strike by the Communications Workers of America against Pacific Northwest Bell. National union officials gave speeches saying that the strike was about insuring that women and men received equal wages. But as the strike concluded, a contract was going up for a vote that would make wage discrimination worse than ever.
In other local news, Oregon Governor Bill McCall vetoed a bill that would have made it illegal for farm workers to organize unions. McCall's veto followed a week-long vigil by the farm workers and their supporters. The Council for Women's Equality reported on the 1971 session of the Oregon Legislature. Eugene activists started a local chapter of Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.
Several women collaborated on a photo essay about the ways that little girls are molded into willing housewives. The original photo essay took up the center two pages of the newspaper. I had no way to scan the entire layout, so I had to do it in chunks. I did the best that I could, but what you see here can't match the power of the original.
You can find these and other articles below.
Table of Contents (With Links to Articles)
· Cover
· "Phone Strike" -- Page 1
· Letters -- Page 2
· Local News -- Pages 2-3
· "Songs of Struggle" (Reprinted from Sing Out!) -- Pages 4-5
· "Oppression: Societal not Personal Roots" -- Page 6
· "Footnotes of a Maturing Woman" -- Page 6
· Book Reviews (The Bell Jar by Sylvia Plath and Them by Joyce Carol Oates) -- Page 7
· Photo Essay -- "Her Prison Needs No Walls" -- Pages 8-9
· "Swinging in the Marketplace" -- Page 10
· "Sexist Hits from the Ballpark" -- Page 10
· Gay People's Alliance Letter to the Register-Guard -- Page 10
· "Moon Slide" -- Page 11
· August Calendar -- Page 11
· "Growing Out of It" (Reprinted from the Portland Bridge) -- Pages 12-13
· Information and Classified Ads (Includes brief articles about the formation of the National Women's Political Caucus and the Eugene chapter of the National Organization for Women) -- Page 14
· Poetry -- Page 15
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Labels: Volume 1
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 2014
Volume One, Number Six -- July 1971
In July, 1971, the women of Women's Press dealt with the topics of aging, rape, Chicana identity and a national YWCA Chicana conference. There was also debate about the merits of articles in the May/June issue that discussed sexism in the "alternative" culture, and a report of the discriminatory working environment experienced by waitresses at a local restaurant. Poetry, instructions for fixing a flat tire, herstory, and a review of Germaine Greer's Female Eunuch rounded out this issue of the paper. As was typical for Women's Press in this era, reprints from other feminist publications were mixed with the original articles and artwork produced by local women.
Table of Contents (With Links to Articles)
· Cover
· "It Hurts to be Obsolete: The Aging Woman" -- Page 1
· Letters -- Page 2
· "The Solution is the Problem" -- Page 2
· Eugene: Local News: "Sexual Politics at the Brass Rail," "Women's Equality Council," and more -- Page 3
· Editorial Page -- Page 4
· "Broken Thoughts for Together Living" -- Page 5
· "Feeling Flat?" (Instructions for Changing a Flat Tire) -- Page 5
· Book Review: Female Eunuch -- Page 6
· Poetry Page -- Page 7
· "The Weaker Sex?" (Women's Work During World War II) -- Page 8
· "Rape: An Analysis" -- Page 10
· "Alternate Culture Mirrors America's" -- Page 11
· "Thinking Back" -- Page 11
· "Chicana Identify" -- Page 12
· Classified/Information -- Page 14
· Herstory: Abigail Scott Duniway, "Eggs in Jacksonville" -- Page 15
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Labels: Volume 1
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 2014
Volume One, Number Five -- May/June 1971
In May/June of 1971, Eugene's Women's Press published stories that seem strangely current to a contemporary reader. Feminists were engaged in anti-war activism, pondering the question of "Are Our Sons Dying for Off Shore Oil?" (In this case, the oil was off the shores of Cambodia.) Some feminists were questioning whether "alternatives" to capitalist culture are just as patriarchal as the mainstream they supposedly challenge. Women from privileged backgrounds struggle to confront both their privilege and their oppression. I don't know whether to be depressed or inspired by all of this. After all, as one second-wave writer put it, feminism is "the longest revolution."
Table of Contents (With Links to Articles)
· Cover
· "From An American White White Middle Class Woman" (Poem) -- Page 1
· First Oregon NOW Chapter in Portland -- Page 1
· Editorial Page -- Page 2
· "May Day" (Coverage of Demonstrations) -- Page 3
· "Are Our Sons Dying for Off Shore Oil?" -- Page 3
· "Everything You Always Wanted to Know About VWs" -- Page 4
· Women's Labor News -- Page 5
· More News -- Page 6
· "Alternative Life Styles: The Monster in Disguise" -- Pages 7-10
· "How to be a Good Secretary" -- Page 10
· "Commune Life" and "Radicalibs" -- Page 11
· "Herstory: First Woman to Practice Law in Oregon" -- Page 12
· Poetry -- Page 13
· Information and Reviews -- Page 14
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Labels: Volume 1
MONDAY, JANUARY 13, 2014
My interest in these matters
My interest in preserving and making Women's Press/Womyn's Press available is rooted in my own membership in the WP collective between June of 1983 and July of 1991. It is one of the hundreds of small, grassroots feminist newspapers that sprouted in the United States in the 1970s and 1980s. I have a complete set, and while these newspapers are still in remarkably good shape, newsprint does deteriorate over time. Thus, this project.
I am also interested in preserving WP as part of my graduate school work in library studies and women's studies. This coming semester, I'm going to take a class called Contemporary Feminist Thought. Going through the textbooks, it seems that we will be studying primarily the work of academics. I think that it's also important to attend to the contributions to feminist theory made by ordinary women without academic credentials. For me, feminism is a profoundly egalitarian set of movements. WP contains artwork, stories, personal experiences, and yes, theory and analysis. It's worth preserving, and I hope you enjoy reading it.
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Labels: Background information
SUNDAY, DECEMBER 29, 2013
Volume One, Number Four -- April 1971
Volume 1, Number 4 of Women's Press is a snapshot of an exhilarating, difficult, intense time. Abortion is still illegal, although an abortion rights movement is growing in Oregon and throughout the United States. The federal department of Health, Education, and Welfare has conducted an investigation into sex discrimination at the University of Oregon. The US war in Indochina still rages, and feminist women are among the activists working to end it.
Table of Contents (With Links to Articles)
· Cover
· Women of Laos Photo Essay -- Page 1
· Editorial Page -- Page 2
· "Mutual Birth Control and Sexual Enjoyment" -- Page 2
· "International Women's Day with the Pageant Players" -- Page 3
· Welfare Rights and Legalized Prostitution -- Page 3
· "H.E.W. and the U. of O." -- Pages 4-5
· "Why Call a Repairman?" (How to change a fuse) -- Pages 4-5
· Poetry and Reviews -- Page 6
· News about Oregon's Abortion Law -- Page 7
· Personal Experiences of Abortion and Unwed Motherhood Page 8 and Page 9
· "Toys for Tots?" -- Page 10
· "Mr. Rogers and Sesame Street" -- Page 10
· Herstory ("Women, the Original Healers" and two other short articles) -- Page 11
· Women and Resistance to the Vietnam War -- Pages 12 -13
· "Angela Davis Answers Questions in Harlem" -- Page 14
· Information -- Page 15
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Labels: Volume 1
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2013
Volume One, Number Three: March 1971
Here is Volume 1, Number 3 of Women's Press, published in Eugene, Oregon in March 1971.
Table of Contents (With Links to Articles)
· Cover -- Page 1
· Articles on sex discrimination and the law -- Page 2
· Women at meeting of Chicana/o organizers at Nyssa -- Page 3
· Articles about living peacefully with nature -- Page 4
· Handywoman: Bicycle repair and how to repair an appliance cord -- Page 5
· Things men can do (to support women's liberation) -- Page 6
· Day Care Chart (of Eugene, OR day care providers) -- Page 7
· Day care articles -- Page 8 and Page 9
· History of University of Oregon student child-care co-op -- Page 10
· "A Golden Canary Sings" -- first-person account from former topless waitress -- Page 10
· Letters -- Page 10
· Women and the [Vietnam] War -- Page 11
· Articles on Bernadette Devlin, moulding workers strike, and poetry -- Page 12
· Reviews -- Page 13
· "Bible Stories" -- Page 14
· Information and Classified Ads -- Page 15
· "International Women's Day" -- Page 16
· "Tales of Suffrage" -- Page 16
· "Grandma Brown": How she crossed the prairie to Oregon City in 1846 -- Page 16
I was interested (though not surprised, actually) that my web browser's spell checker in the year 2013 still did not recognize the word "handywoman." For those of you who might not be familiar with Bernadette Devlin, she is an Irish socialist and former member of the United Kingdom Parliament. A link to her Wikipedia biography is here.
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Labels: Volume 1
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 2013
Volume One, Number Two: January/February 1971
Here is Volume One, Number Two of Women's Press, a grassroots feminist newspaper from Eugene, Oregon. On page one it says that it is the issue for January/February1971, but this may not be right. The collective published twelve different papers in its first volume.
Please note that the front-page article, "The Politics of Housework" by Pat Mainardi, was not original to Women's Press. According to the Chicago Women's Liberation Union Herstory Project, Pat Mainardi was a member of the New York radical feminist group Redstockings, which originally published this well-known essay in 1970. However, it looks as if the delightful drawings that accompany the piece are the original work of Women's Press graphic artist Karen daHinten.
Table of Contents (With Links to Articles):
· The Politics of Housework by Pat Mainardi -- Page 1 (continues on Pages 6 and 7).
· Editorials -- Page 2
· Letters and short articles on sexism, abortion, Planned Parenthood -- Page 3
· Articles -- "Women Face Medical Indifference" -- Page 4
· Essay "Beauty and the Beast" and Poetry -- Page 5
· "Children's Corner" and articles on job-sharing and the Gay People's Alliance -- Page 8
· Articles: "Angela [Davis] Shackled" and "Karate" -- Page 9
· Interview with Jane Fonda by "Several Atlanta Women's Groups" -- Page 10
· Book Reviews -- Page 10
· Information and Classifieds -- Page 11
· "Woman Arrested in Riot" (Biography of Dr. Marie Equi) -- Page 12
Incidentally, if you've not heard of Marie Equi, she was a fascinating feminist, anarchist and abortion provider who lived from 1872-1952. Born in Massachusetts, she graduated from the University of Oregon Medical School in 1903. The Oregon History Project, the Oregon Encyclopedia, and Wikipedia all have biographies of Dr. Equi. According to the Oregon Encyclopedia,
With a courage and conviction unusual for her time, Equi openly enjoyed associations with other women that would readily be called "lesbian relationships" today. For fifteen years she lived with a niece of the Olympia Brewing Company founder, and she adopted an infant girl whom the two women raised.
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Labels: Volume 1
Holdings: Womyn's press. (uchicago.edu) https://catalog.lib.uchicago.edu/vufind/Record/10831659