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STEINEM,
SMEAL IMAGINE A FUTURE FOR Ms.
By
Chris Lombardi - Wenews correspondent

NEW YORK (WOMENSENEWS)--Gloria
Steinem and Eleanor Smeal can't remember the day they met.
When asked point-blank,
they just laugh. "Oh, we've always known each other."
Finally, they surmise they met at the first, "enormous, life-changing"
meeting of the newborn National Women's Political Caucus in 1971.
In the rush
of everything that had just begun, the journalist who had helped
start New York magazine and the grassroots organizer moving from
civil rights to the formation of the National Organization for Women
were just two streams in a river beginning to push its way through
the United States and the world. It would be another year before
Steinem's group, the Women's Action Alliance, gave birth to the
magazine that would become the voice of the women's movement: Ms.
Now Smeal and
Steinem are re-launching Ms. as an official partner of the Feminist
Majority, the national women's organization Smeal created in 1987.
Steinem will continue in her role as senior advisor and the organization
will own Liberty Media Corporation, the magazine's publisher.
The Feminist
Majority bought Liberty Media in November 2001, and is in the midst
of making some big changes--relocating from New York to Los Angeles,
hiring a whole new staff and reintroducing advertising, to name
a few. But the mission of the magazine will remain unchanged--to
give the feminist, activist movement its most prominent voice.
From Newsletter
to Sold-Out Glossy
"At first,
we thought of it as a combination newsletter and a means of raising
money," says Steinem, speaking of the magazine's formative
years in the early 1970s. The "we" in question was the
Women's Action Alliance, which began as an information clearinghouse
for the burgeoning movement and included on its board Brenda Feigen,
co-founder of the National Women's Political Caucus; the-now U.S.
Rep. Eleanor Holmes Norton from the District of Columbia and New
York Bella Abzug, who would soon become a member of the U.S. Congress;
and Jane Galvin Lewis, founder of the National Black Feminist Organization.
"I was
a little skeptical about this," says Steinem, "because
I knew how hard it was to start a magazine."
Still, with
initial support from New York editor Clay Felker, the first issue
of Ms. hit the newsstands in January 2002 and sold out in four days.
"I went to Los Angeles to promote the magazine and somebody
on this call-in radio show said they couldn't find it. I thought,
"oh no, they haven't been distributed out here." Instead,
she learned all the issues were gone. A collector's item, "it's
now selling for $500," Steinem says.
Shaping Women's
History
Readers who
aren't fortunate enough to have that first magazine in an attic
somewhere can read articles from that and other early issues in
its 30th anniversary issue, out on newsstands now. A retrospective
filled with reprints and reminiscences of the past 30 years, it
shows how Ms. both chronicled the women's movement and broke new
ground, covering issues and trends that are only now entering mainstream
feminist consciousness. For example, Ms.'s early editorial staff
included Alice Walker in 1974, and the magazine published Angela
Davis in 1975. Walker, along with founding editor Joanne Edgar,
sought out and published South African writer Bessie Head and other
African women writers.
Both Steinem
and Smeal were careful to point out that the women's movement, even
in its early years, was far more multi-racial than similar movements
of that time, such as the environmental movement and that against
the Vietnam War.
"Most of
the early feminists had been involved in civil rights," says
Smeal. She adds that Aileen Hernandez was the first president of
the Feminist Majority and the organization's statement of purpose
was written by Paule Marshall, author of "Brown Girl, Brownstone."
Ms. launched
the political gender gap discussion with Steinem's 1972 piece, "Women
Voters Can't Be Trusted." Steinem pointed to studies that showed
women were not, as generally believed, a conservative force in electoral
politics--and didn't vote the same as their husbands as much as
the latter tended to believe. The gender gap went on to be studied
and further quantified by Smeal in 1980, as part of the campaign
to pass an Equal Rights Amendment.
"I think
it's changed the course of history," says Smeal. "Nobody
doubts that women vote differently, now."
And Ms. covered
"global feminism" long before the term was invented, thanks
to Robin Morgan, editor of "Sisterhood is Powerful" and
"Sisterhood is Global," who became the magazine's editor
in chief in 1990 but was on the team from its earliest years. From
the beginning, the magazine had special sections that brought in
women's voices from overseas.
"That was
our policy," says Steinem. "Not to just have correspondents,
but to hear the voices from those countries." In 1980, it was
Ms. that first brought to a national audience the issue of female
genital mutilation, weathering the initial criticism that U.S. feminists
were "culturally insensitive" to question such a practice.
Ms.'s Future:
Working Globally when It Matters Most
The Feminist
Majority has also been a global activist organization from its inception,
playing a key role in mobilizing women's organizing against the
Taliban in Afghanistan long before September 11th. The future Ms.
will tap into this organizational expertise in mapping out a vision
for the magazine's future, both Steinem and Smeal emphasized.
"We want
to have stringers," says Smeal, "reporting from on the
ground--not only in Afghanistan but other areas of the world. There's
a very well-developed global women's movement and we need to tap
into it." Steinem adds that this will continue what Ms. did
during the Persian Gulf War. "We had correspondents in Iraq,
in Israel, in South Africa and the surrounding countries. I think
we were unique in that regard."
The Feminist
Majority is hoping to develop a special fund for international reporting,
as well as one for investigative journalism--"so Ms. can go
out and crack stories," says Smeal. Meanwhile the magazine
will go forward with a largely new editorial staff and will relocate
from New York, where the magazine has been based for 30 years, to
Los Angeles, where the Feminist Majority has its West Coast headquarters.
They also plan on keeping some staff in the Washington D.C. area,
from which the organization directs most of its grassroots and lobbying
campaigns.
The magazine
will also begin carrying ads again, but won't go after the usual
suspects who advertise in women's magazines. Ms. had been ad-free
since 1990, when Steinem and the editors at the time decided to
drop all advertising to escape advertisers' insistence on Ms. publishing
'traditional' women's magazine content.
Revlon, for
example, withdrew plans to advertise in Ms. in 1980 because a recent,
award-winning story about Russian feminist dissidents publishing
newspapers featured a cover photo in which the women wore no makeup.
Steinem and Smeal say that taking ads now won't lead to those consequences,
however, because they will only accept ads from nonprofit groups
and progressive businesses, especially women-owned businesses.
Vehicle for
Action
When Ms. launched
30 years ago, the journalist Harry Reasoner declared "I'll
give it six months before they run out of things to say." Ms.
proved him and the many other detractors wrong by publishing three
decades worth of cutting edge journalism, media reviews and critiques,
stories, musings, memories and jokes about the issues that women
care about. And they still haven't run out of things to say.
In fact, Steinem
and Smeal plan on being more talkative than ever, especially where
the magazine's and organization's Web sites are concerned. They're
planning on more sophisticated activism alerts, dialogues, and chats.
Ms. will become, says Smeal, what it was first envisioned to be--a
vehicle for action.
Chris Lombardi
is a New York-based freelance writer. In addition to Women's Enews,
where she wrote most of the "21 Leaders for the 21st Century"
series, she writes for The Nation, The Progressive and other publications.
For more
information:
Ms. Magazine:
- http://www.msmagazine.com
Feminist Majority:
- http://www.feminist.org
Also see Women's
Enews, January 1, 2002: -
"Seven Who Changed the Rules for Nations": - http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/772/
Copyright 2002
Women's Enews.
www.womensenews.org
apr 2002

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