List of lesbian periodicals in the United States
Appearance
A timeline of notable lesbian magazines, periodicals, newsletters, and journals in the United States organized by the initial publication date and then title. For a global list, see the list of lesbian periodicals.
Era | Name | Start date | End date | Location | Publishers | Frequency | Notes | Identifier | References | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1940s–1960s (Before Stonewall riots) [edit] |
Vice Versa[a] | 1947 | 1948 | Los Angeles, California | Lisa Ben | Monthly | First documented lesbian periodical in the United States. | OCLC 1624255 | [1][2] | |
The Ladder | 1956 | 1972 | San Francisco, California | Daughters of Bilitis | Monthly/bimonth | First widely distributed lesbian periodical in the United States. | ISSN 0023-7108 | [2] | ||
Daughters of Bilitis–Philadelphia Newsletter | 1967 | 1968 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | Philadelphia chapter of Daughters of Bilitis | [1][3] | |||||
No More Fun and Games[b] | 1968 | 1973 | Somerville and Cambridge Massachusetts | Cell 16 and Female Liberation | Irregular | Considered by some scholars to be the first lesbian magazine to espouse separatist feminism. Untitled (1968) and titled The Female Slate (1970). | OCLC 2265148 | [4][5][6] | ||
Come Out! | 1969 | 1972 | New York City | Gay Liberation Front | Sporadic | One of the newspaper's purposes was to promote lesbian feminism | OCLC 14078148 | [7][8] | ||
Maiden Voyage | 1969 | 1970 | Boston, Massachusetts | Boston chapter of Daughters of Bilitis | Continues as Focus: A Journal for Gay Women (1971–1983) | OCLC 42316511 | [9][10][11] | |||
1970s [edit] |
Ain't I A Woman[b] | 1970 | 1974 | Iowa City, Iowa | AIAW Collective/Iowa City Women's Liberation Front Publications Collective | Twice a month | ISSN 0044-6939OCLC 2221525 | [12][13] | ||
off our backs[c] | 1970 | 2008 | Washington, D.C. | off our backs, inc. | ISSN 0030-0071OCLC 1038241 | |||||
Sisters: By and For Lesbians[d] | 1970 | 1975 | San Francisco, California | San Francisco chapter of Daughters of Bilitis | Monthly | ISSN 0049-0644 | [2][14][15][16][17][11] | |||
Amazon: A Midwest Journal for Women[b] | 1971 | 1984 | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | Amazon Collective | Monthly (1972–1976), bimonthly (1976–1984) | ISSN 2381-0718 | [18][19] | |||
Focus | 1971 | 1983 | Boston and Cambridge, Massachusetts | Boston chapter of Daughters of Bilitis | Continues as Maiden Voyage (1969–1971). Subtitled A Journal for Gay Women (1971–1977), A Journal for Lesbians (1977–1983). | OCLC 233599645, 233599608 | [1][20][16] | |||
Killer Dyke | 1971 | 1972 | Chicago, Illinois | "Flippies" or the Feminist Lesbian Intergalactic Party | Once a year | Satire magazine | OCLC 25217267, 1000821785 | [10][21] | ||
Lavender Vision[b] | 1971 | Cambridge, Massachusetts | OCLC 2263450 | [11] | ||||||
LA DOB Newsletter | 1971 | 1972 | Los Angeles, California | Los Angeles chapter of Daughters of Bilitis | Continued as Lesbian Tide (1971–1980) | |||||
Lavender Woman[b] | 1971 | 1976 | Chicago, Illinois | OCLC 28896850 | [11] | |||||
Lesbian Tide[b] | 1971 | 1980 | Los Angeles, California | Jeanne Córdova | Continued as LA DOB Newsletter (1971–1972) | ISSN 0270-8167 | [11][2][14][22] | |||
Mother | 1971 | Stanford, California | Mother Publications | Continues as Proud Woman (1972) | OCLC 2264422 | [11] | ||||
Purple Star: Journal of Radicalesbians | 1971 | Ann Arbor, Michigan | Women's Liberation of Ann Arbor | OCLC 942695178 | ||||||
Reach Out | 1971 | 1972 | Detroit, Michigan | Detroit chapter of Daughters of Bilitis | OCLC 2266772, 1000926490 | [10] | ||||
Scarlet Letter | 1971 | 1972 | Madison, Wisconsin | [10][23] | ||||||
Siren: A Journal of Anarcho-Feminism | 1971 | Chicago, Illinois | [10] | |||||||
Spectre[b] | 1971 | 1972 | Ann Arbor, Michigan | OCLC 18917439 | [11] | |||||
Amazon Quarterly[b] | 1972 | 1975 | Oakland, California and West Somerville, Massachusetts | OCLC 2750571 | [1][16] | |||||
ALFA Newsletter | 1973 | 1976 | Atlanta, Georgia | Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance | Continues as Atalanta (1977–1994) | [10][14] | ||||
Better Homes and Dykes Newsletter of the Lesbian Alliance | 1972 | Iowa City, Iowa | [24] | |||||||
Echo of Sappho[b] | 1972 | 1973 | Brooklyn, New York | Sisters for Liberation | OCLC 2320647 | [1][14] | ||||
Furies[b] | 1972 | 1973 | Washington, D.C. | The Furies Collective | ISSN 0046-5305OCLC 2334944 | [1][2] | ||||
Lesbians Fight Back | 1972 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | [1][10] | |||||||
Maine Freewoman's Herald: A Mostly Lesbian Journal | 1972 | Portland, Maine | [18] | |||||||
National Lesbian Information Service News | 1972 | San Francisco, California | [11] | |||||||
Portcullis | 1972 | Los Angeles, California | [11] | |||||||
Purple Rage | 1972 | NYC | [11] | |||||||
Proud Woman | 1972 | Stanford, California | Mother Publications | Continues as Mother (1971) | OCLC 25185782 | [11] | ||||
Tres Femmes | 1972 | San Diego, California | [11] | |||||||
Coming Out Rage | 1973 | NYC | [1] | |||||||
Cowrie | 1973 | 1974 | NYC | Community of Women | [1][14] | |||||
Cries from Cassandra | 1973 | Chicago, Illinois | The Amazon Nation | [14] | ||||||
Desperate Living | 1973 | 1977 | Baltimore, Maryland | [1][25] | ||||||
Dykes and Gorgons[b] | 1973 | Berkeley, California | OCLC 55515875 | [1][26] | ||||||
Gay Revolution of Women Newsletter | 1973 | 1974 | Rochester, New York | Gay Revolution of Women (GROW) | Continues as Women in Sunlight (1974), New Women's Times (1974–1985), and Lesbian Resource Center Newsletter (1974) | [27][28] | ||||
The Lesbian Feminist | 1973 | 1979 | NYC | [1] | ||||||
Moonstorm | 1973 | 1980 | St. Louis, Missouri | Lesbian Alliance of St. Louis, Missouri | [29] | |||||
Mother Jones Gazette | 1973 | 1974 | Knoxville, Tennessee | [11] | ||||||
One-to-One: A Lesbian/Feminist Journal of Communication | 1973 | NYC | [11][10] | |||||||
Sapphire | 1973 | San Francisco, California | [11] | |||||||
So's Your Old Lady | 1973 | 1979 | Minneapolis, Minnesota | [11] | ||||||
The Udder Side | 1973 | NYC | [11] | |||||||
Albatross | 1974 | 1980 | East Orange, New Jersey | Albatross Collective | Varied subtitles but usually The Lesbian Feminist Satire Magazine | [30] | ||||
Lesbian Connection[c] | 1974 | Present | Michigan | Ambitious Amazons | Free to lesbians everywhere | ISSN 1081-3217 | [2] | |||
Lesbian Resource Center Newsletter | 1974 | Rochester, New York | Continues as Gay Revolution of Women Newsletter (1973), Women in Sunlight (1974), and New Women's Times (1974–1985) | [14][31][32] | ||||||
Lesbian Voices | 1974 | 1981 | San Jose, California | [11] | ||||||
Mom's Apple Pie: Newsletter of the Lesbian Mother's National Defense Fund | 1974 | 1985 | Seattle, Washington | Lesbian Mother's National Defense Fund | [25][33] | |||||
Purple Cow | 1974 | 1976 | Columbus, Ohio | [25][34] | ||||||
Quest: A Feminist Quarterly[b] | 1974 | 1985 | A radical feminist journal. | [35][36] | ||||||
Satin for Gay Women | 1974 | San Jose, California | [11] | |||||||
Wicce | 1973 | 1975 | Philadelphia, Pennsylvania | [11][37] | ||||||
WomanSpirit[b] | 1974 | 1984 | Wolf Creek, Oregon | Ruth and Jean Mountaingrove | The first lesbian-feminist periodical about spirituality. | [38][39][40] | ||||
Women in Sunlight | 1974 | Rochester, New York | Continues as Gay Revolution of Women Newsletter (1973), New Women's Times (1974–1985), and Lesbian Resource Center Newsletter (1974) | [14][41][32] | ||||||
Dyke: A Quarterly[b] | 1975 | 1978 | NYC | OCLC 21506187 | [1] | |||||
Goodbye to All That: A Lesbian Feminist Publication | 1975 | 1977 | Austin, Texas | Austin Lesbian Organization | Continues as LesBeFriends | [14][18] | ||||
Lesbian-Feminist Union News | 1975 | 1978 | Louisville, Kentucky | [42] | ||||||
Lesbian Herstory Archives Newsletter | 1975 | Present | NYC | Lesbian Herstory Archives | ISSN 1064-0819 | [42] | ||||
The Lesbian Lipservice | 1975 | 1976 | Ann Arbor, Michigan | [11] | ||||||
Lesbian News | 1975 | Present | Los Angeles, California | Jinx Beers (until 1989) | monthly | ISSN 0739-1803 | [22][43][44] | |||
The Lesbian Newsletter | 1975 | Ann Arbor, Michigan | [11] | |||||||
New Women's Times[b] | 1975 | 1985 | Rochester, New York | New Women's Times, Inc. | Monthly | Continues as Gay Revolution of Women Newsletter (1973), Women in Sunlight (1974), and Lesbian Resource Center Newsletter (1974) | [27][32] | |||
Pointblank Times: A Lesbian-Feminist Paper | 1975 | Houston, Texas | [18][25] | |||||||
We Got It | 1975 | 1976 | Madison, Wisconsin | [11] | ||||||
C A L F A Notes | 1976 | Cleveland Heights, Ohio | Cleveland Area Lesbian Feminist Alliance (CALFA) | [45][46] | ||||||
Conditions[b] | 1976 | 1990 | Brooklyn, New York | Dedicated to publishing lesbians, specifically working class lesbians and lesbian of color. | [47][14][48] | |||||
Lesbiana Speaks | 1976 | 1977 | Miami, Florida | [49] | ||||||
Lesbian Milepost | 1976 | 1977 | Anchorage, Alaska | Continues as Klondyke Cuntree (1976), Klondyke Kontact (1977–1980) | [47][31] | |||||
Out and About: Seattle Lesbian/Feminist Newsletter | 1976 | 1986 | Seattle, Washington | [11][50] | ||||||
Rubyfruit Reader | 1976 | 1978 | Santa Cruz, California | [51] | ||||||
Salsa Soul Sisters/Third World Women's Gay-zette | 1976 | 1985 | NYC | Salsa Soul Sisters Third World Wimmin Inc. Collective | [25] | |||||
Sinister Wisdom[b] | 1976 | Present | Charlotte, North Carolina; Lincoln, Nebraska; Berkeley and Oakland, California | Catherine Nicholson and Harriet Ellenberger (Desmoines) | Longest surviving lesbian literary journal in the United States. | ISSN 0196-1853OCLC 3451636 | [10][52] | |||
Wishing Well | 1976 | Santa Rosa, California | [10] | |||||||
Atalanta | 1977 | 1994 | Atlanta, Georgia | Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance | Continues as ALFA Newsletter (1973–1976) | [14][25] | ||||
Azalea: A Magazine by Third World Lesbians | 1977 | 1983 | NYC | Salsa Soul Sisters Third World Wimmin Inc. Collective | [53][47] | |||||
Changes | 1977 | Winter Park, Florida | Greater Orlando Lesbian/Feminists | [47] | ||||||
Klondyke Kontact: The Anchorage Lesbian Newsletter | 1977 | 1980 | Anchorage, Alaska | Bimonthly | Continued as Lesbian Milepost, Cunni Linguist, and Klondyke Cuntree. | [54][47] | ||||
The Leaping Lesbian | 1977 | 1981 | Ann Arbor, Michigan | Bimonthly | [1] | |||||
Lone Star Lesbians | 1977 | 1978 | Austin, Texas | [31] | ||||||
Matrices: A Lesbian/Feminist Research
Newsletter |
1977 | 1996 | Three times a year, irregular | [55] | ||||||
Pearl Diver | 1977 | 1978 | Portland, Oregon | A black lesbian magazine | [56][57] | |||||
Tribad: A Lesbian Separatist Newsjournal | 1977 | 1979 | NYC | [2][58][59] | ||||||
Two Dykes & Others: A Texas Lesbian Periodical | 1977 | [18] | ||||||||
Amazon Spirit | 1978 | Helena, Montana | Montana Amazons Unlimited | [47] | ||||||
Boulder Lesbian Network Newsletter | 1978 | Boulder, Colorado | Boulder Lesbian Network | [47] | ||||||
Feminary: A Feminist Journal for the South Emphasizing Lesbian Visions | 1978 | 1982 | Chapel Hill, North Carolina | [47][60][1] | ||||||
Austindyke | 1979 | Austin, Texas | Monthly | [47] | ||||||
DONT: Dykes Opposed to Nuclear Technology Newsletter | 1979 | NYC | [47] | |||||||
Lesbians of Color Caucus Quarterly | 1979 | Seattle, Washington | [1][50] | |||||||
1980s[edit] |
Associated Lesbians of Puget Sound (ALPS) Newsletter | 1980s | 2000s | [50] | ||||||
Dyke Diannic Wicca: Newsletter for Biophilic Hags of Magick | 1980 | Berkeley, California | Artemis | [47][61] | ||||||
Green Mountain Dyke News | 1980 | Bennington, Vermont | Green Mountain Dykes | [14][62][47] | ||||||
Lesbian Insider, Insighter, Inciter | 1980 | Minneapolis, Minnesota | [63] | |||||||
The Lunatic Fringe | 1980 | Chicago, Illinois | [14] | |||||||
Telewoman: A Woman's Newsletter | 1980 | 1983 | Pleasant Hill, California | [64] | ||||||
Womyn's Braille Press Newsletter | 1980 | Minneapolis, Minnesota | Womyn's Braille Press Inc. | [14] | ||||||
Common Lives/Lesbian Lives[b] | 1981 | 1996 | Iowa City, Iowa | OCLC 8234014 | ||||||
Lesbian Community News | 1981 | 1987 | Lincoln, Nebraska | Lincoln Legion of Lesbians | irregular | [65] | ||||
Big Apple Dyke News (B.A.D. News) | 1981 | 1988 | NYC | [66] | ||||||
(The) Other Black Woman | 1981 | Jackson Heights, Queens, New York | Committee for the Visibility of the Other Black Woman: The Black Lesbian | [67] | ||||||
Black Lesbian Newsletter | 1982 | San Francisco, California | San Francisco Women's Center's Black Lesbian Newsletter | Continues as Onyx (1983–1984) | [14][68] | |||||
The Celibate Woman: A Journal for Women Who Are Celibate or Considering this Liberating Way of Relating to Others | 1982 | 1988 | Washington, D.C. | [10] | ||||||
Dyke Separatist / Amazon Magick | 1982 | Berkeley, California | Amethyst/Artemis | [61] | ||||||
In the Life: the Newsletter of the June L. Mazer Lesbian Collection | 1982 | Present | Los Angeles, California | June L. Mazer Lesbian Archives | [63][69][70] | |||||
Maize: A Lesbian Country Magazine[e] | 1982 | Present | Minneapolis, Minnesota; Preston-Potter Hollow, New York; Serafina, New Mexico | [71][14][72] | ||||||
Woman's Journal-Advocate | 1982 | 1992 | Lincoln, Nebraska | The WJ-A collective | Monthly | [73] | ||||
Lesbian Contradiction | 1983 | 1994 | ISSN 1064-4776 | [63] | ||||||
Onyx | 1983 | 1984 | San Francisco, California | San Francisco Women's Center's Black Lesbian Newsletter | Continued as Black Lesbian Newsletter (1982) | [68] | ||||
Woman to Woman | 1983 | 1985 | Lake Charles, Louisiana | Linda Parks | Free to lesbians and women in prison | [74] | ||||
Hot Wire: The Journal of Women's Music and Culture [f] | 1984 | 1994 | Toni Armstrong Jr. | [75] | ||||||
Lesbian Ethics | 1984 | Venice, California | Jeannette Silveira | ISSN 8755-5352 | [14][22] | |||||
On Our Backs | 1984 | 2006 | Lesbian pornographic magazine as a play on off our backs | [76] | ||||||
Asian Lesbians of the East Coast Newsletter | 1984 | NYC | [62][77] | |||||||
I Know You Know: Lesbian Views and News | 1984 | 1985? | Indianapolis, Indiana | [78] | ||||||
Lesbian Health Resource Center Newsletter | 1985 | Durham, North Carolina | Lesbian Health Resource Center (LHRC) | [31] | ||||||
Golden Threads | 1985 | 2016 | Demorest, Georgia | Network for older lesbians | [79][80] | |||||
WAVELENGTH. A Lesbian Feminist Publication | 1985 | Seattle, Washington | Groundswell | [81] | ||||||
Hag Rag | 1986 | 1993 | Milwaukee, Wisconsin | Intergalactic Lesbian Feminist Press | OCLC 62882091 | [14][62][82] | ||||
Yoni: Lesbian Erotica Quarterly | 1986 | Oakland, California | [81] | |||||||
Visibilities | 1987 | 1991 | NYC | ISSN 0892-7375 | [81][83] | |||||
Dykes, Disability and Stuff: Cause We Always Have Stuff to Share | 1988 | Madison, Wisconsin; Boston, Massachusetts | For lesbians with disabilities, formats included large print, audio, braille, and electronic. | [14] | ||||||
The L-Word | 1988 | Present | Bayside, California | [63] | ||||||
Aché: A (Free) Publication for Black Lesbians | 1989 | 1993 | Albany and Berkeley, California | [14] | ||||||
1989 | Oakland, California | [84] | ||||||||
Hikané: The Capable Womon: Disabled Wimmin's Magazine for Lesbians and Our Wimmin Friends | 1989 | Hillsdale, New York | [14] | |||||||
Tacoma Lesbian Concern (TLC) newsletter | 1989 | 2003 | Tacoma, Washington | [50] | ||||||
1990s[edit] |
Old Lesbians Organizing for Change Reporter | 1990 | Present | Houston, Texas; Athens, Ohio | [14][85] | |||||
Girljock | 1990 | 1997 | Berkeley, California | Irregular | First lesbian sports periodical.[86] | [87] | ||||
Shamakami: Forum for South Asian Feminist Lesbians | 1990 | 1997 | San Francisco, California | [14][88] | ||||||
Curve | 1991 | Present | Continues as Deneuve (1991–1995) | [89] | ||||||
Esto No Tiene Nombre: revista de lesbianas latinas | 1991 | 1994 | Miami, Florida | [90][91][92][14][93] | ||||||
Wimmin Magazine | 1991 | [94] | ||||||||
Canswers: The Quarterly Newsletter of the Lesbian Community Cancer Project | 1992 | Chicago, Illinois | [46] | |||||||
Dykespeak | 1993 | [95] | ||||||||
Lesbian Review of Books: An International Quarterly Review of Books by, for, and about Lesbians | 1994 | 2002 | Altadena, California; Hilo, Hawaii | ISSN 1077-5684 | [31][96] | |||||
Conmoción: An International Latina Lesbian Vision | 1995 | 1996 | Miami, Florida | [91][92][97] | ||||||
Journal of Lesbian Studies | 1997 | Present | Binghamton, New York | Haworth Press | [98] | |||||
Bint el Nas | 1998 | Present | San Francisco, California | Arab-world identified online magazine | [99] | |||||
Rain and Thunder: A Radical Feminist Journal of Discussion and Activism | 1998 | Present | Northampton, Massachusetts | Radical feminism with a lesbian focus. | [100] | |||||
She Magazine | Feb. 1999 | Nov. 2015 | Fort Lauderdale, Florida | Longest running magazine for LGBT women in Florida | [101] | |||||
2000s[edit] |
Go Magazine | 2000 | Present | NYC | Free | [102] | ||||
Harrington Lesbian Fiction Quarterly | 2000 | 2005 | Binghamton, New York | Continued as Harrington Lesbian Literary Quarterly (2006–2008) | [103] | |||||
Harrington Lesbian Literary Quarterly | 2006 | 2008 | Continued as Harrington Lesbian Fiction Quarterly (2000–2005) | [104] | ||||||
Issues! The Magazine for Lesbians of Color | 2000 | [105] | ||||||||
Jota! | 2000 | Los Angeles, California | Chicana lesbian poetry review | [92] | ||||||
(el) telarañazo | 2000 | La telaraña | [97][106] | |||||||
Velvetpark: Dyke Culture in Bloom | 2002 | Present | NYC | [107] | ||||||
Tagg Magazine | 2012 | Present | Washington, DC | Eboné Bell | Bi-Monthly | "Everything lesbian, queer, and under the rainbow." | [108] | |||
EveryQueer | 2012 | Present | NYC | Meg Ten Eyck | Daily | Emphasizing LGBTQ+ women, transgender and nonbinary people | [108] |
Unknown year
[edit]Name | End date | Location | Publishers | Notes | References |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Amazonian | Pioneer Valley, Massachusetts | ||||
Threads Newsletter | NYC | Astrea Lesbian Foundation for Justice | |||
Carolina Lesbian News | Charlotte, North Carolina | [27] | |||
Island Lesbian Connection | Paia, Hawaii | [109] | |||
Lesbian Lifeline | Daytona Beach, Florida | ||||
Lesbian Visual Artists Newsletter | San Francisco, California | [14] | |||
Lesbians in Colorado | Denver, Colorado | [109] | |||
Lesburbia | Montgomeryville, Pennsylvania | ||||
Dinah: A Monthly Publication of the Lesbian Activist Bureau[47] | 1977 | ||||
COGS: Coalition of Gay Sisters Newsletter | Columbia, Maryland | Coalition of Gay Sisters[47] | |||
Amazon Farmers | 1977 | Fayetteville, Arkansas | Ozark Wimmin on Land | ||
Moonstorm | St. Louis, Missouri | St. Louis Lesbian Alliance | [25] | ||
Anamika | 1985 | Brooklyn, New York | Asian American focus | ||
De Colores: Newsletter of Bay Area Lesbians of Color | 1987 | San Francisco, California | |||
A P L Network news | 1988 | NYC | Asian Pacific Island Lesbian Network (APL) | ||
Multi-Cultural Jewish Dyke Newsletter | 1993? | Huntington, New York | [14] | ||
Women's Central News | 1999 | Arizona | [110][111] | ||
G.B.F. Magazine | 1990 | Hollywood, Los Angeles, California | |||
Albuquerque Lesbian Rag: A Monthly Lesbian Information and Nonsense Source | 1991 | Corrales, New Mexico | |||
Girlfriends | 1993 | 2006 |
Footnotes
[edit]Explanatory notes
[edit]- ^ Can be read in full at Queer Music Heritage
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Can be read in full at Reveal Digital's Independent Voices
- ^ a b Can be read in part at Reveal Digital's Independent Voices
- ^ Can be read in full at University of California, Berkeley Libraries here
- ^ Can be read in part at Julie R. Enzser's Lesbian Poetry Archive
- ^ Can be read in full at Hotwire's website
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Potter 1986, p. xii.
- ^ a b c d e f g Lo, Malinda (November 1, 2005). "Back in the Day: The Ladder, America's First National Lesbian Magazine". AfterEllen.
- ^ Gallo, Marcia M. "Introduction: Gay Rights Movement: Series 10: Lesbian Herstory Archives Newsletter Collection". microformguides.gale.com. Retrieved 2018-10-11.
- ^ Echols, Alice. Daring to Be Bad: Radical Feminism in America, 1967-75, University of Minnesota Press, 1990, ISBN 0-8166-1787-2, p164
- ^ "No More Fun and Games, A Journal of Female Liberation". Green Lion Press. 17 December 2011.
- ^ Endres & Lueck 1996, p. 246-250.
- ^ Lawritz, John; Shelley, Martha; Martello, Leo; et al. (November 14, 1969). "Come Out!". Vol. 1, no. 1. New York City: Gay Liberation Front. JSTOR community.28035043. OCLC 14078148.
- ^ Dansky, Steven F. (July–August 2009). "Come Out!'s Historic 3-Year Run". The Gay & Lesbian Review Worldwide. 16 (4). Boston: Harvard Gay & Lesbian Review, Inc.: 20–22. ISSN 1532-1118. OCLC 0013042. ProQuest 198691141.
- ^ Stone, Martha; Wofsey, Michael. "A Bibliography Of Boston Gay And Lesbian Writing". HQ76.3/New England: Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Librarians and Library Workers.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Special Identity Women's Periodicals: 1963-1983". Women's Institute for Freedom of the Press. Archived from the original on 2010-12-05. Retrieved 2018-01-04.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x Potter 1986, p. xiii.
- ^ "LGBTQ Life in Iowa City, Iowa: 1967-2010". Out History.
- ^ "About Ain't I A woman? (Iowa City, Ia.) 1970-1974". Library of Congress: Chronicling America.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z "Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Periodicals". Northwestern University. Archived from the original on 29 January 2018. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
- ^ Parkinson 2003, p. S.E to SQU.
- ^ a b c Faderman 1991, p. 346.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. Sex Garage - Spike Team.
- ^ a b c d e Barnett, Meg; Killgore, Vicky; Ferentinos, Susan (1997). "A Timeline of 1970's Austin Lesbian-Gay Activism: 1968 to 1983". Austin Lesbian Activism in the 1970s Herstory Project. Archived from the original on 2000-08-18.
- ^ Schwamb 2001, p. Amazon.
- ^ Endres & Lueck 1996, p. 96.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. K & J - KWIR Publications.
- ^ a b c Retter, Yolanda (1995). "Lesbian (Feminist) Los Angeles, 1970-1990: An Exploratory Ethnohistory". University of New Mexico. Archived from the original on 1 May 2011. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
- ^ Strand, Karla (2018). "Second Wave Feminism: Researching the Modern Women's Movement : Magazines and Newspapers". University of Wisconsin-Madison Libraries.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. Best Friends - Bits of Boys.
- ^ a b c d e f g Covina, Gina; Galana, Laurel, eds. (1975). The Lesbian Reader: An Amazon Quarterly Anthology. Amazon Press. pp. 244–245. ISBN 978-0-9609626-0-0.
- ^ "Dykes & Gorgons — Browse by title — Independent Voices". voices.revealdigital.com. Retrieved 2018-02-20.
- ^ a b c "Division of Rare and Manuscript Collections". rmc.library.cornell.edu. Archived from the original on June 9, 2009. Retrieved 2014-06-13.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. Gay Liberator - Gay Socialist Newsletter.
- ^ Rivers, Daniel Winunwe (2013). Radical Relations: Lesbian Mothers, Gay Fathers, and Their Children in the United States since World War II. University of North Carolina Press. p. 271. ISBN 9781469607191.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. A M S A News - Alyson.
- ^ a b c d e Miller 2001, p. Lesbian Journal - Lyr Publishing.
- ^ a b c Endres & Lueck 1996, p. 237-242.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. Michael Southerlende - My-o-My.
- ^ Freeman, Susan K. (2000). "From the Lesbian Nation to the Cincinnati Lesbian Community: Moving Toward a Politics of Location". Journal of the History of Sexuality. 9 (1/2): 137–174. JSTOR 3704635.
- ^ Armstrong 2002, p. 240.
- ^ "Records of Quest: A Feminist Quarterly, 1970-1985: A Finding Aid". Arthur and Elizabeth Schlesinger Library on the History of Women in America, Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, Harvard University. 2013. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
- ^ "Wicce (Philadelphia, PA) [newspaper]: v. 1, no. (Fall 1973) - no. 4 (Summer 1975), complete". John J. Wilcox, Jr. LGBT Archives - William Way LGBT Community Center. Retrieved 4 January 2018.
- ^ "The Feminist and Lesbian Periodical Collection: Title Letter W". Special Collections and University Archives University of Oregon Libraries. 1998.
- ^ Mountaingrove, Ruth; Mountaingrove, Jean (1985). "Rootworks". In Cheney, Joyce (ed.). Lesbian Land. Minneapolis, Minn: Word Weavers. pp. 125–128. LCCN 85016866.
- ^ Glenn & Shorr 1998, p. W.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. W A A C - Wyngate and Bevins.
- ^ a b Miller 2001, p. Latvian Gay Magazine - Lesbian Interest Press.
- ^ LN history by Jinx Beers, part 2 Archived October 2, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ LN history by Jinx Beers, part 1 Archived October 2, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Publications". Astraea Lesbian Foundation For Justice. Archived from the original on January 26, 2008. Retrieved April 5, 2008.
- ^ a b Miller 2001, p. C A L F A Notes - Cascade Voice.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n LHA 1980, p. 19-20.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. Concern - Cycling Studs.
- ^ Glenn & Shorr 1998, p. L.
- ^ a b c d "Northwest Glbt Journals And Other Serial Publications". Faculty.washington.edu. Retrieved 2012-08-31.
- ^ Armstrong 2002, p. 143.
- ^ "Journal". Sinister Wisdom. Retrieved 2012-08-31.
- ^ D'Emilio, John (1992). Making Trouble: Essays on Gay History, Politics, and the University. New York: Routledge. p. 261. ISBN 978-0-415-90509-1.
- ^ Glenn & Shorr 1998, p. K.
- ^ McKinney, Cait (2015). "Newsletter networks in the feminist history and archives movement". Feminist Theory. 16 (3): 309–328. doi:10.1177/1464700115604135. S2CID 148278013.
- ^ Glenn & Shorr 1998, p. P.
- ^ Miller 2001, p. P A C E Publishing - Photos by Eros.
- ^ Faderman 1991, p. 348.
- ^ "1970s Lesbian Feminism". The Feminist eZine. Retrieved 2012-08-31.
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{{cite book}}
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- ^ Dunlap, David W (January 8, 1996). "For Lesbian Magazine, a Question of Image". New York Times. Retrieved 2012-08-31.
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- ^ Gross, Larry (2012). Up from Invisibility: Lesbians, Gay Men, and the Media in America. Columbia University Press. p. 237. ISBN 9780231529327.
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Sources
[edit]- Armstrong, David (1985). Trumpet to Arms: Alternative Media in America. South End Press. ISBN 978-0-89608-193-2.
- Armstrong, Elizabeth (2002). Forging Gay Identities. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-02693-0.
- Endres, Kathleen L.; Lueck, Therese L. (1996). Women's Periodicals in the United States: Social and Political Issues. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 9780313286322.
- Faderman, Lillian (1991). Odd Girls and Twilight Lovers. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-07488-9.
- Miller, Alan V. (2001). "Our Own Voices: Lesbian & Gay Periodicals 1890s-2000s". Canadian Lesbian and Gay Archives. Archived from the original on 2 February 2009. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
- Parkinson, Phil (2003). "Serials List". Lesbian and Gay Archives of New Zealand (LAGANZ). Retrieved 14 February 2018.
- Potter, Clare (February 1986). The Lesbian Periodicals Index. Tallahassee, FL: Naiad Press. ISBN 978-0930044749.
- "A Guide to Current Lesbian Periodicals" (PDF). Lesbian Herstory Archives Newsletter. 6. July 1980.
- Glenn, Emily; Shorr, Manya (1998). "The Feminist and Lesbian Periodical Collection". Special Collections and University Archives, University of Oregon Libraries. Retrieved 10 October 2018.
- Schwamb, Don (2001). "Gay Media and Media Coverage in the History of the LGBT Community in Milwaukee, Wisconsin". Milwaukee LGBT History Project, Inc. Retrieved 11 October 2018.
External links
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Clardy, Andrea Fleck (1993). Words to the Wise: A Writer's Guide to Feminist and Lesbian Periodicals & Publishers. New York: Firebrand Books. ISBN 9781563410321.
- "Feminist Periodicals". Stichwort.
Archival collections
[edit]- Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance Archives. Rubenstein Rare Book & Manuscript Library, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
- The Feminist and Lesbian Periodical Collection. Special Collections and University Archives, University of Oregon Libraries, Eugene, Oregon.
- Guide to the Joan Ariel Collection of Lesbian Periodicals. Special Collections and Archives, The UC Irvine Libraries, Irvine, California.
- The June L. Mazer Lesbian Archive at UCLA. UCLA Center for the Study of Women, University of California, Los Angeles, California.
- Lesbian Herstory Archives. Brooklyn, New York.