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MS. MAGAZINE


                        Ms. magazine is a revolutionary American women’s magazine first published in
                        1971 as an insert in New York magazine. It first appeared as a separate magazine
                        in 1972 and was published in that format every month from 1972 to 1987. As of
                        2018, the magazine was still in print but was published on a quarterly basis. Ms.
                        magazine was founded by Second Wave feminists Gloria Steinem and Dorothy
                        Pitman Hughes. The magazine was meant to be a voice in the mainstream
                        media for women that was actually created by women. The magazine’s first
                        years focused on challenging social norms for women. Steinem and Hughes
                        wanted a magazine for women that would focus on topics beyond fashion and
                        housekeeping. The magazine was originally going to be called Sojourner, named
                        after Sojourner Truth, but this title was perceived as being the title of a travel
                        magazine. Some important milestones in the feminist movement come from works
                        published in Ms. The magazine made history when, in 1972, it published names
                        of women who had had abortions. The Supreme Court would legalize abortion
                        a year later. A story published in 1976 was the first story to address the issue of
                        domestic violence in a national magazine.



                     as it did me, that the fight is far from over. Let this dismissal of a woman’s

                     experience move you to anger. Turn that outrage into political power. . . .
                     I am not a postfeminist feminist. I am the Third Wave.” 16

                     THIRD WAVE FEMINISM


                     Building upon the successes of the First and Second Waves of feminism,
                     Third Wave feminists worked to be even more inclusive, ensuring
                     they were moving beyond
                     experiences of only white,
                                                          “So I write this plea to all women,
                     middle-class women. They             especially the women of my generation:
                     began to explore ways in which       Let [Clarence] Thomas’ confirmation
                                                          serve to remind you, as it did me,
                     the patriarchal structure in the     that the fight is far from over. Let this
                     United States was harmful            dismissal of a woman’s experience
                                                          move you to anger. Turn that outrage
                     to women of color, minority          into political power. . . . I am not a
                     groups in general, and men.          postfeminist feminist. I am the Third
                                                          Wave.”
                                                                16
                     One important voice of Third                      —Rebecca Walker, writer
                     Wave feminism was bell hooks,



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