FEM Feminism

Zines about feminism, oppression of women, women's empowerment, women's rights, and gender from a feminist perspective. File zines about gender from a queer perspective under QUR Queer.

Hoax # 4: Feminisms and Hirstories

"Hoax is intended to question how you feel about feminism in relation to different aspects of day-to-day life. In this fourth issue, we will be exploring the topic of hirstories. We wanted to approach feminism from a different perspective, exploring a chronology of both where we are going and how we have come to be. We all live simultaneously within past, present, and future versions of ourselves. We fixate on our memories, make judgements based on our imperial experiences, and push ourselves to obtain fixed goals for unforeseeable futures."

Hoax #5: Feminisms and Community

"Hoax is intended to question how you feel about feminism and different aspects of everyday life. In this fifth issue, we will be exploring the topic of community - what constitutes community? Is a community always a physical space? Is community something you choose to become a part of? What role do communities play in anti-oppressive work." Collection of short articles. Includes an introduction to the Amish community and a discussion of Slutwalk.

Hoax #3

"Hoax is intended to question how you feel about feminism in relation to different aspects of day-to-day life. In this third issue, we will be exploring the topic of health. We will be attempting to ask questions and raise concerns about how science and technology influence our daily lives. We will be investigating the differences between sex and gender, food and nutrition, the meaning of illness (both physical and mental), our relationship to our bodies, as well as a variety of other topics."

24 Theses for a New Women's Movement & 12 Theses for a Nonviolent Earth

Subtitle: Creating a Culture of Partnership among Women, Men, and the Earth. Covers briefly many different subjects, including religion, birth control, children, animals, love, dreaming, and ecology. "Dieter Duhm and Sabine Lichtenfels were active members of Germany's New Left student movement in the 1960s and early 1970s. In time, they grew disenchanted with demonstrating against the multitudinous forms of oppression and decided, instead, to create a "positive alternative."