
The Feminist Press
at the City University of New York
http://www.feministpress.org
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[Return to Index of Expertise] Last updated 07/25/01
Contact Information:
365 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10016
Phone: 212-817-7915
Fax: 212-817-1593
E-mail: fempress@gc.cuny.edu
CENTER DESCRIPTION
The Feminist Press at the City University of New York is a nonprofit educational press dedicated to restoring the lost history and culture of women in the United States and the world. The Feminist Press hosts educational projects and publishes literary works by women that represent women's perspectives from around the world.
AREA(S) OF EXPERTISE
Women's literature; history; incarceration/crime.
RECENT PROJECTS AND ACTIVITIES
History
Women Writing Africa. The Women Writing Africa project aims to restore African women's voices. It contains a collection of written and oral narratives to be published in six regional anthologies and represents a documentation of self-conscious literary expression centered around African women's history.
Literature
Cross-Cultural Memoir Series.
Helen Rose Scheuer Jewish Women's Series.
Women Writing in India: 600 B.C. to the Present. This 10-year project completed by the Feminist Press documents the lives and experiences of Indian women through 200 texts from 11 languages. The volumes provide contemporary and historical perspective and scholarship on Indian women.
Women's Guide to the Wired World. This resource helps women take full advantage of electronic communications and includes a directory of 700 on-line resources of special interest to women.
Feminist Thought and Scholarship
Women's Studies International and Women's Studies Quarterly. These publications are designed to educate and disseminate information on women's literature, history, and the inclusion of women's perspectives in the curriculum. The Quarterly is a journal on teaching women's studies, recent scholarship, classroom aids, bibliographies, and strategies for teaching.
PUBLICATIONS
Challenging Racism and Sexism: Alternatives to Genetic Explanations, edited by Ethel Tobach and Betty Rosoff. A collection examining race and gender in an effort to uncover the underlying social causes of hatred based on difference.
The Cross-Cultural Study of Women: A Comprehensive Guide, edited by Margot I. Duley and Mary I. Edwards. A collection of lecture outlines, discussion questions, and annotated bibliographies on gender inequality around the world and in the college classroom.
Women Have Always Worked: A Historical Overview, Alice Kessler-Harris. A history of women's work, including household labor, paid employment, social reform work, and the changing shape of the contemporary work force among diverse groups of women.
Families in Flux, Amy Swerdlow, Renate Bridenthal, Joan Kelly, and Phyllis Vine. A study of the diversity of household forms and kinship ties throughout history as well as the different social, political, emotional, and economic functions of the family.
The Women's Studies Quarterly. The newsletter is published twice yearly, with each issue focusing on a specific topic.
Competition: A Feminist Taboo?, edited by Valerie Miner and Helen E. Longino with a foreword by Nell Irvin Painter. Discusses competition in daily life, including in the academic and corporate worlds, in athletics, in the family, and in cross-class and cross-cultural relationships.
On Peace, War, and Gender: A Challenge to Genetic Explanations, edited by Anne E. Hunter, with associate editors Catherine M. Flamenbaum and Suzanne R. Sunday. A collection of essays, statements, and poems that examine the use and misuse of scientific research in studies of gender and aggression, especially in the areas of war and peace.
The New Lesbian Studies: Into the Twenty-First Century, edited and introduced by Bonnie Zimmerman and Toni A. H. McNaron, with a foreword by Margaret Cruikshank. A collection of essays exploring the history of lesbian studies as well as its current impact on conceptions of identity and community, teaching, academic disciplines, university practices, and the development of feminist and lesbian theories.
Health and Health Care
Complaints and Disorders: The Sexual Politics of Sickness, Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English. A sequel to Witches, Midwives, and Nurses, it follows the tradition of American sexism in medicine before and after the turn of the century.
Witches, Midwives, and Nurses: A History of Women Healers, Barbara Ehrenreich and Deirdre English. A pamphlet exploring two phases in the male takeover of health care: the suppression of witches in medieval Europe and the rise of the male medical profession in the United States.
With These Hands: Women Working on the Land, edited and with an introduction by Joan M. Jensen. A collection tracing the history of farm women in the U.S. through letters, songs, fiction, official documents, journal entries, poetry, and oral history.
Seeds 2: Supporting Women's Work Around the World, edited by Ann Leonard with an introduction by Martha Chen and afterwords by Mayra Buviniv, Misrak Elias, Rounaq Jahan, Caroline Moser, and Kathleen Staudt. Analyses of economically viable projects from women's initiatives in Ecuador, Ethiopia, India, Mozambique, Nepal, Sudan, Thailand, the U.S., and Zambia.
Rights and Wrongs: Women's Struggle for Legal Equality, 2nd ed., Susan Cary Nicholas, Alice M. Price, and Rachel Rubin. A guide to women and the law focusing on U.S. law and how it has affected women's constitutional rights, their position in marriage, their employment opportunities, and their control over their bodies.
History
The Feminist Press publishes considerable fiction, autobiographical and biographical sketches, short stories, poetry, novels, and many other materials about women's lives. Contact them for a complete list of publications.
Women Writing in India: 600 B.C. to the Present, edited by Susie Tharu and K. Lalita. A collection of 200 texts by Indian women in two volumes, including poetry, fiction, drama, and autobiography.
The Women's Guide to the Wired World: A User-Friendly Handbook and Resource Directory, Shana Penn. This guide shows how to take full advantage of electronic communications and provides a directory of on-line resources of special interest and use to women.
Get Smart! What You Should Know (But Won't Learn in Class) about Sexual Harassment and Sex Discrimination, 2nd ed., Montana Katz and Veronica Vieland. A guide for female students that contains statistics, case studies, practical solutions, and legal guidelines on discrimination, harassment, and date rape.
Curriculum Development
Women of Color and the Multicultural Curriculum: Transforming the College Classroom (with a Segment on Puerto Rican Studies), edited by Liza Fiol-Matta and Mariam K. Chamberlain. A guide to multicultural curricular change with an emphasis on women of color and including sections on already transformed undergraduate curriculums.
All the Women Are White, All the Blacks Are Men, But Some of Us Are Brave: Black Women's Studies, edited by Gloria T. Hull, Patricia Bell Scott, and Barbara Smith. A collection of materials for developing courses on black women.
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