logo
‘Completely radical': how Ms magazine changed the game for women

‘Completely radical': how Ms magazine changed the game for women

The Guardian4 hours ago
The first of July marks the anniversary of Ms magazine's official inaugural issue, which hit newsstands in 1972 and featured Wonder Woman on its cover, towering high above a city. Truthfully, Ms debuted months earlier, on 20 December 1971, as a forty-page insert in New York magazine, where founding editor Gloria Steinem was a staff writer. Suspecting this might be their only shot, its founders packed the issue with stories like The Black Family and Feminism, De-Sexing the English Language, and We Have Had Abortions, a list of 53 well-known American women's signatures, including Anaïs Nin, Susan Sontag, and Steinem herself. The 300,000 available copies sold out in eight days. The first US magazine founded and operated entirely by women was, naysayers be damned, a success.
The groundbreaking magazine's history, and its impact on the discourse around second-wave feminism and women's liberation, is detailed in HBO documentary Dear Ms: A Revolution in Print, which premiered at this year's Tribeca film festival. Packed with archival footage and interviews with original staff, contributors, and other cultural icons, Dear Ms unfolds across three episodes, each directed by a different film-maker. Salima Koroma, Alice Gu, and Cecilia Aldarondo deftly approach key topics explored by the magazine – domestic violence, workplace harassment, race, sexuality – with care, highlighting the challenges and criticisms that made Ms. a polarizing but galvanizing voice of the women's movement.
Before Ms launched, the terms 'domestic violence' and 'sexual harassment' hadn't yet entered the lexicon. Women's legal rights were few, and female journalists were often limited to covering fashion and domesticity. But feminist organizations like Redstockings, the National Organization for Women, and New York Radical Women were forming; Steinem, by then an established writer, was reporting on the women's liberation movement, of which she was a fundamental part. In Part I of the documentary, Koroma's A Magazine for all Women, Steinem recalls attending a women's liberation meeting for New York magazine. Archival footage discloses what was shared there, and other meetings like it: 'I had to be subservient to some men,' says one woman, '… and I had to forget, very much, what I might have wanted to be if I had any other choice.'
The response to Ms was unsurprising, its perspective so collectively needed. 'A lot of these articles could still be relevant,' Steinem muses in Part I. But, says the publication's first editor, Suzanne Braun Levine, 'I don't think we all were prepared for the response. Letters, letters, letters – floods of letters.' Koroma unveils excerpts of those first letters to the editor, vulnerable and intimate: 'How bolstering to find that I am not alone with my dissatisfaction that society had dictated roles for me to graduate from and into.' By the time Ms was in operation, the staff was publishing cover stories on Shirley Chisholm, unpaid domestic labor, and workplace sexual harassment. 'Who is it you're trying to reach?' a journalist asks Steinem in an interview back then. She replies: 'Everybody.'
'They tried to be a magazine for all women,' explained Koroma in a recent interview, 'and what happens then? You make mistakes, because of the importance of intersectionality.' In an archival audio clip, the writer and activist (and close friend of Steinem's) Dorothy Pitman Hughes says: 'White women have to understand … that sisterhood is almost impossible between us until you've understood how you also contribute to my oppression as a Black woman.' Marcia Ann Gillespie, the former editor in chief of Essence and later Ms's editor in chief, confides to Koroma: 'Some of the white women had a one-size-fits-all understanding of what feminism is, that our experiences are all the same. Well, no, they're not.' Alice Walker, who became an associate editor, shared her own writing and championed others', like Michele Wallace's, in the publication's pages before quitting in 1986, writing about the 'swift alienation' she felt due to a lack of diversity.
Wallace recounts her experience as a Ms cover girl, her braids removed, her face caked in make-up. She adds: 'I want to critique [Ms], but they were very supportive of me. I don't know what would've become of me if there hadn't been a Ms magazine.' She left, too. 'I was not comfortable with white women speaking for me.' Levine admits, 'We made a mistake,' featuring Black writers but having few Black cover stars and no Black founding staff.
'The work still needs to be done; we're always going to have to rethink things,' Koroma says. It's a running thread in Dear Ms, one that creates a rich and ultimately loving picture of the magazine. 'Ms. is a complex and rich protagonist,' Aldarondo reflected. 'If you only talk about the good things and not the shadow, that's a very one-dimensional portrait. One of the things that makes Ms so interesting and admirable is that they wrestled with things in the pages of the magazine.' For Part III, No Comment (named for Ms's column that called out misogynistic advertising), Aldarondo chronicles its contentious coverage of pornography, which the staff primarily differentiated from erotica as inherently misogynistic, many of them aligning with the Women Against Pornography movement.
In an episode that opens with unfurling flowers and the words of the delightful porn star, educator, and artist Annie Sprinkle, Aldarondo depicts the violence of the era's advertising and pornography, and the women who were making – or enjoying – pornography and sex work, proudly and on their own terms. In a response to the 1978 cover story Erotica and Pornography: Do You Know the Difference? Sprinkle and her colleagues, the writers and adult film actors Veronica Vera and Gloria Leonard, led a protest outside the Ms office. The staff hadn't 'invited anyone from our community to come to the table', says Sprinkle, despite adult film stars' expertise about an exploitative industry they were choosing to reclaim. 'To see these women as fallen women,' says Aldarondo, 'completely misses the mark.'
Behind the scenes, the staff themselves were at odds. Former staff writer Lindsy Van Gelder states: 'I knew perfectly good feminists who liked porn. Deal with it.' Contending with the marginalization faced by sex workers, Ms ran Mary Kay Blakely's cover story, Is One Woman's Sexuality Another Woman's Pornography? in 1985. The entire issue was a response to activists Andrea Dworkin and Catharine MacKinnon's Model Antipornography Law, which framed pornography as a civil rights violation and which Carole S. Vance, the co-founder of the Feminist Anti-Censorship Task Force, describes in Dear Ms as 'a toolkit for the rightwing' that ultimately endangered sex workers. Dworkin, says Vance, refused a dialogue; instead, the magazine printed numerous materials, the words of opposing voices, and the law itself to 'reflect, not shape' readers' views, says founding editor Letty Cottin Pogrebin. The hate mail was swift – including Dworkin's, once a staff colleague: 'I don't want anything more to do with Ms – ever.'
Gu reveals something far more frightening than hate mail, a horror that didn't make its way into the film: death threats and bomb threats, which the staff received in response to their most controversial stories. 'There was actionable change that happened because of what these women did,' says Gu. 'The danger they put themselves in is not to be discounted. I get emotional every time I talk about it ... I have benefited largely from the work of these women, and I'm very grateful.'
That actionable change refers to the legislative reforms prompted by Ms's coverage of domestic violence and workplace harassment. In A Portable Friend, Gu examines the 1975 Men's Issue, the 1976 Battered Wives Issue, and the 1977 issue on workplace sexual assault. 'Back then, there was no terminology if a woman was being hit by her partner at the time,' says Gu. She spotlights heartbreaking archival footage of women sharing their experiences with abuse: 'If it'd been a stranger, I would have run away.' Van Gelder herself reflects on the former partner who hit her. 'Did you tell anyone?' Gu asks. 'Not really.'
In an archival clip, Barbara Mikulski, former Maryland senator and congresswoman, says: 'The first legislation I introduced as a congresswoman was to help battered women. I got that idea listening to the problems of battered women and reading about it in Ms' Adds Levine: 'We brought it into the daylight. Then there was the opening for battered women's shelters, for legislation, for a community that reassured and supported women.' The same idea applied to workplace sexual harassment: 'If something doesn't have a name, you can't build a response,' Levine exclaims. 'The minute it had a name, things took off and changed.'
Gu shared that while 'there's a little bit of questioning as to whether it was Ms who coined the term [domestic violence], they were certainly the first to bring the term into the public sphere and allow for a discussion'. The Working Women United Institute eventually collaborated with Ms on a speak-out on sexual harassment.
Despite obstacles, the scholar Dr Lisa Coleman, featured in Part I, describes the publication as one 'that was learning'.
'It's easy to be critical at first,' says Koroma, 'but after talking to the founders, you realize that these women come from a time when you couldn't have a bank account. It's so humbling to talk to the women who were there and who are a large part of the reason why I have what I have now.' Gu noted that the lens of the present day can be a foggy one through which to understand Ms — which, in truth, was 'completely radical,' she says. 'You weren't going to read about abortion in Good Housekeeping. You have to plant yourself in the shoes of these women at that time.'
Our elders endured different but no less tumultuous battles than the ones we face now, many of which feel like accelerated, intensified iterations of earlier struggles. 'Talk to your moms, to your aunts and grandmas,' Koroma added. Aldarondo agreed: 'One of the great pleasures of this project, for all of us, was this intergenerational encounter and getting to hear from our elders. It's very easy for younger people to simply dismiss what elders are saying. That's a mistake. I felt like I already understood the issues, and then I learned so much from these women.'
Dear Ms.: A Revolution in Print premieres on HBO on 2 July and will be available on Max
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

I got matching tattoos with Harry Styles after meeting him in a hotel at 17 – now I'm the envy of every One Directioner
I got matching tattoos with Harry Styles after meeting him in a hotel at 17 – now I'm the envy of every One Directioner

The Sun

time33 minutes ago

  • The Sun

I got matching tattoos with Harry Styles after meeting him in a hotel at 17 – now I'm the envy of every One Directioner

A YOUNG woman has revealed that when she was just 17, she 'snuck out' and got a matching tattoo with Harry Styles. Savannah Phillips, a young woman from the United States, has gone viral online after opening up about the tattoo story and is now the envy of every One Direction fan. Posting on social media, the blonde beauty shared a snap of her and Harry Styles, 31, from back in 2012, and claimed that Harry had sketched a heart for her, which she got tattooed on her ankle. After being bombarded with hundreds of questions from desperate One Direction fans who were eager to know more on the backstory, soon after Savannah uploaded a follow-up clip, whereby she explained how her friendship with Harry started. Savannah claimed that she first met Harry, who was recently spotted snogging a mystery woman at Glastonbury, and the rest of the One Direction band in Los Angeles, whilst out for her aunt's birthday at the W Hotel. Whilst eating lunch, Savannah and her family soon noticed that One Direction were sitting next to them and they eventually got talking. After finding out that it was one of One Direction's first times in LA, Savannah recommended they go to In-N-Out Burger - and before long, they were all there together. Not only this, but the lads then invited Savannah and her family to one of their concerts. Savannah and Harry in particular stayed connected through texting and just a few weeks later, when Savannah was only 17 at the time, she found herself in her car with Harry. They went to her house where they tucked into shrimp tacos and Harry shared his desire to get a tattoo that evening, as she explained: 'Harry kept mentioning throughout the night, 'I wanna get a tattoo'.' Savannah claimed that she had always wanted a tattoo, but her mother wouldn't allow it. Despite this, the pair soon found themselves in a tattoo parlour, as Savannah confessed: 'He goes and grabs a big piece of paper and a pen and he's just drawing something for like five, 10 minutes, and then he walks up to me with a piece of paper and is like 'get this'.' Harry Styles fans shocked as 1D star snaps pic of them on holiday in Rome - and DMs it to them months later Savannah confirmed that Harry had called her mum from the shop to get her approval and just minutes later, she had his sketched heart inked onto her ankle. Savannah beamed: 'I got it done and it didn't hurt, because I think my adrenaline was pumping so hard.' It was a very strange, surreal and sweet chapter of my life that I am very grateful for Savannah Phillips Savannah later confirmed that Harry also got inked whilst with her that same night. Reflecting on her friendship with Harry, Savannah acknowledged: 'People ask if we're still in touch and, no, I haven't been in touch with Harry for a very long time, but I know if I run into him on the street, he would give me a hug, it'd be like no time had passed. 'I still do keep in contact with some of the crew and the band members - we all have very different lives now, it was a very strange, surreal and sweet chapter of my life that I am very grateful for.' Which tattoos hurt the most? Depending on what part of your body you choose to ink, tattoos can range significantly in terms of pain levels. Some of the most painful areas are those where the skin tends to be thinner or closer to the bone. Each area has specific factors which contribute to the level of pain. Ribcage: Thin skin, little muscle, and many nerve endings. Feet and ankles: Many bones, tendons, and nerve endings close to the surface. Hands and fingers: Many bones, tendons, and nerve endings, resulting in increased pain during tattooing. Knuckles can be especially painful. Spine: Proximity of the spinal cord and nerve endings makes it sensitive. Tattooing directly over the vertebrae can be especially painful. Knees and elbows: Thin skin and little padding between the skin and the underlying bones. Armpits and groin: High concentration of nerve endings and lymph nodes. Neck and throat: Thin and sensitive skin, with many nerve endings and blood vessels close to the surface. Source: Tatt2Away Harry Styles' fans gasp The TikTok clip, which was posted under the username @ thatsavchick, has clearly left many open-mouthed, as it has quickly gone viral and racked up 1.6 million views, 250,800 likes and 1,797 shares. Fans of Harry Styles were gobsmacked by Savannah's story and many raced to the comments to express their jealousy. One person asked: 'How does it feel to live every One Directioner's dream?' Another added: 'You're everything I ever wanted to be….' A third commented: "I'm not a jealous person but that changes today.' Someone else revealed: 'Teenage me would have been jealous of you.' Whilst one avid Harry Styles fan wrote: 'I will peel your skin off and wear it myself.'

Kelly Ripa admits she took 'very indecent photos' by David Muir's portrait at studio in NYC
Kelly Ripa admits she took 'very indecent photos' by David Muir's portrait at studio in NYC

Daily Mail​

time34 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Kelly Ripa admits she took 'very indecent photos' by David Muir's portrait at studio in NYC

Kelly Ripa admitted to taking 'very indecent photos' in front of David Muir's portrait inside their shared ABC studios in New York City. Kelly and husband Mark Consuelos welcomed guest David to their Live with Kelly and Mark morning show on Tuesday. During the show, Kelly and Mark couldn't stop complimenting David, who has served as the anchor for World News Tonight since 2014. Since they share the same network and studios, Kelly admitted to going to the World News Tonight area of the building to 'stare at him.' David mentioned the 'terrifying gigantic images of all of us in this building,' which led to Kelly to admit that she's got a lot of 'indecent photos' of herself 'standing in front of your picture that I can't show on the air.' Kelly said that the network told her she couldn't show the pictures because they were 'not suitable for broadcast.' Mark joked that 'HR was right next to her.' David took it a step further and said: 'I thought you were talking about the other photos. For years, she's like, "You just say when [and I'll] send!' Kelly simply added 'exactly.' She also playfully said she would call him by the nickname 'Commander Handsome.' They couldn't stop showering David with compliments during his appearance on the morning show. Mark even told David that looking at him was 'like looking into the sun.' Kelly and David have been friends for years, with Kelly even naming him in her 2022 memoir Live Wire. She wrote: To David Muir, you are the backbone and moral compass I need sometimes.' David has also joined Kelly and Mark, along with their three children Joaquin, Lola and Michael on vacation, including a 2023 holiday to Greece. David has served as the anchor for World News Tonight since September 1, 2014; seen in 2017 'You are a great grill master, your cheeseburgers are delicious,' she told David once on live TV, adding that 'Joaquin would rather eat at David's than anywhere else on Earth.' David has served as the anchor for World News Tonight since September 1, 2014. He took over the role after Diane Sawyer. David is also the lead anchor for any special coverage or breaking news for ABC News. It was previously held by anchor George Stephanopoulos, who had the role from 2014 until 2020.

Barbra Streisand shares love story of how she met husband James Brolin to celebrate 27th wedding anniversary
Barbra Streisand shares love story of how she met husband James Brolin to celebrate 27th wedding anniversary

Daily Mail​

time42 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Barbra Streisand shares love story of how she met husband James Brolin to celebrate 27th wedding anniversary

Barbra Streisand made a rare personal post on social media Tuesday for a very romantic reason. The 83-year-old multi-hyphenate, who revealed she was angry at not receiving equal pay on big Hollywood projects, wished her husband James Brolin, 84, a happy anniversary. 'We met on a blind date 29 years ago tonight, and we married 27 years ago today. I love you honey. B xo. ❤️' she wrote next to a throwback photo of the two. Best wishes poured in from around the world. 'So much love to you both!!!!' wrote Rita Wilson. 'Love you both so so much a wedding a friendship I'll never forget our journeys I'll never forget from Israel to Bali to Spain to Italy New York and LA Congratulations my loves miss you all so always in in my heart and soul ❤️love ❤️ forever and ever Happy happy anniversary' gushed Streisand's go-to designer Donna Karan. 'Happy Anniversary!!' penned celebrity photographer Kevin Mazur. The couple did indeed meet on a blind date. They were setup at a dinner party thrown by mutual friends. 'Everyone could see it immediately,' Brolin's manager Jeff Wald told McCalls in 1998. 'They didn't look up, they didn't talk to anyone else, I don't even think they ate. And then at the end, they left together.' Because of the attention that followed the People singer everywhere, the couple would go driving in Brolin's truck for dates, often driving an hour or so away to San Bernardino county, California with the Ransom Canyon actor behind the wheel and Streisand making sandwiches in her lap. 'Barbra's really never done any of that kind of stuff. She's never really seen that side of America,' he told the now-defunct magazine. One interesting tidbit bout the couple is they remained celibate before tying the knot, and he asked her to marry him three times before she said yes. 'I have to try him out for at least three years,' she joked in an interview with CBS Morning anchor Gayle King. And while promoting her book, My Name is Barbra a couple of years ago, she explained how the two inspired an extremely popular rock ballad. In an interview on The Howard Stern Show she revealed she and Brolin were lying in bed, enjoying a little pillow talk. 'I don't want to fall asleep because then I'll miss you,' the actor told his beloved. It was at that moment the Evergreen singer agreed to his most recent proposal saying, 'OK, yes, I'll marry you.' Streisand shared that story in an interview on 20/20 with Barbra Walters in 1997 and songwriter Diane Warren learned about it. Warren verified the anecdote in an interview with Shortlist in 2016. 'Someone told me there was an interview with Barbra Streisand and her husband and he had said how he doesn't like to go to sleep, you know, if he misses her and I was like, "Wow that's a cool idea for a song if I can figure that out," and that's where I got the title from. She and Brolin were lying in bed, enjoying a little pillow talk. 'I don't want to fall asleep because then I'll miss you,' the actor said and she accepted his most recent proposal saying, 'OK, yes, I'll marry you'; Pictured in Beverly Hills in February 2019 The song was included over the closing credits of the film Armageddon. 'And I kept it in the back of my head and when that movie came round I thought, "You know, I'm gonna write this song because it could be about the end of the world - it could fit that storyline or it could fit this love story."' I Don't Want To Miss a Thing debuted at the top of the Billboard Hot 100 and is Aerosmith's only number one song to date. The hit also received an Oscar nomination for Best Original Song. The couple seem to have made up for the years of celibacy before their marriage. In an April appearance on Today, Brolin revealed 'The best investment we ever made is our mattress,' adding 'We love to sleep late. We (also) do a lot of our work — on the phone, on paper, reading — right next to each other.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store