Contributors
Sarah Henderson photographed the cover. You can see more of her work at www.sirenapictures.com.
Deesha Philyaw (“Ain’t I a
Mommy?") is a freelance writer whose work has appeared in Essence, Wondertime, PMS (poemmemoirstory), and The Washington Post, and has been anthologized in Literary Mama: Reading for the Maternally Inclined (Seal Press, 2005) and Just Like a Girl: A Manifesta! (GirlChild Press, 2008). Deesha holds a BA in economics from Yale University and a master’s degree in teaching. In her pre-mommy, prewriting life, she was a management consultant and an elementary-school teacher. These days, she’s working on her first novel as well as a nonfiction book project, and she blogs at Mamalicious! (www.deeshaphilyaw.com) A native of Jacksonville, Fla., she currently lives in Pittsburgh, Pa., with her two daughters.
A graduate of the science-illustration program at the University of California, Santa Cruz, Katura Reynolds (“Birthing the Monster”) has a passion for the pen-and-ink techniques of the 18th and 19th centuries. Her illustration work has been published in many extremely obscure scientific journals. She finds that reading and writing about sci-fi is a wonderful way to procrastinate on her illustration duties. Revel in her pictures of dead bugs and saber-tooth cat teeth at www.katura-art.com.
Veronica I. Arreola (“Mommy & Me”) is an aging young feminist from Chicago. She has been a fish researcher, pizza-puff fryer, and canvasser for Greenpeace. Currently, she runs an academic support program for women in science and engineering at the University of Illinois at Chicago. She also serves on the boards of the Chicago Abortion Fund and Women in Media & News. When not reading, writing, or blogging, Veronica can be found with her husband of nine years, raising a precocious kindergarten-aged daughter, and watching her beloved Cubs. Read more of her work at vivalafeminista.blogspot.com, where she writes about feminist motherhood and rediscovering her Latinadad.
Claire Christiansen (origami, cover) began learning origami in middle school from her best friend, a Japanese exchange student. Her love of paper folding quickly blossomed and, after graduating from Albion College with a double major in art and anthropology, she formed Clairigami, a one-woman origami business. She uses her own hand-drawn paper, as well as recycled books, to create one-of-a-kind geometric pieces. Claire currently lives in Jackson, Mich., at the Armory Artswalk, a former state prison converted into artists’ apartments and galleries. View her work at Clairigami.etsy.com.
Genesis
In every issue
Editor's Letter
Dear Bitch
Love It/Shove It
Bitch In
Books—Bitch reads. Plus: Trina Robbins on the legacy of Toni Cade Bambara.
Music—Suggested listening
The Back Page—Annals of the birthing room.
Columns
||| On Labor—Dora the Explorer and the dirty secrets of the global industrial economy.
||| On Magazines—When it comes to money, women’s mags continue to play dumb.
||| On the tube—Why Tina Fey is the best thing to happen to women in tv comedy.
Features
::: Birthing the Monster—What if a bug-eyed alien was your baby daddy?
::: Rethinking the Beginning—Scholar Sarah Forth goes searching for feminist inspiration in the most unlikely of places—the Bible. Plus: Melanie Weiss on the first female Torah scribe.
::: Ain’t I a Mommy?—Bookstores brim with motherhood memoirs. Why are so few of them penned by women of color? Plus: Veronica I. Arreola on mommy blogs.
::: Views on a Womb—Technology is changing the choices women have about how and when to reproduce. But are media and culture keeping up? Meisha Rosenberg asks whether assisted reproductive technology has lessened the stigma of infertility. Marcy Darnovsky critiques the marketing of reproductive innovations to gay families. And five reproductive-justice activists talk technology and policy.
::: Keep on Trekkin’—Star Trek and the legacy of female fandom.
::: Prince and the Revolution—Why the 5' 2" singer is the biggest male feminist rock star of the last 25 years...kinda.
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