Feminary: A Feminist Journal for the South Emphasizing Lesbian Visions
LanguageEnglish
Edited byCollective
Publication details
History1969–1982
ISO 4Find out here

Feminary: A Feminist Journal for the South Emphasizing Lesbian Visions was an American radical feminist magazine that ran from 1969 to 1982.

History

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Feminary originated in 1969 as the Research Triangle Women’s Liberation Newsletter, a small pamphlet advertising women's liberation groups in the Raleigh, Durham, and Chapel Hill, North Carolina (known collectively as the Research Triangle for their proximity to major research universities).[1][2][3] By its third issue, the newsletter would be renamed to the Female Liberation Newsletter of Chapel-Hill.[2][3] The newsletter was founded by a local feminist activist group, Women's Liberation #27, a feminist and socialist offshoot of Students for a Democratic Society.[1] [...]. Editors during this early period included Elizabeth Knowlton and Marguerite Beardsley.[3][4]

The Newsletter's publication frequency began to dwindle by the second half of 1970, and in late 1971, the Newsletter would stop publishing for over a year.[3] A new core of collective members, including Knowlton, Nancy Blood,[5] Linda Brogan, and Leslie Kahn, would restart the newsletter in early 1973, this time renamed to simply the Feminist Newsletter.[3] This new iteration became a bi-weekly publication, and in addition to local announcements, began to publish essays, news, poetry, and classified ads.[3]

In 1974, the Newsletter would be renamed to Feminary, a term inspired by Monique Wittig's 1969 novel Les Guérillères.[3]

In an issue published in the spring of 1978, Feminary would make its final name change to Feminary: A Feminist Journal for the South Emphasizing Lesbian Visions.[3][4] With this name change came an explicit change in scope, which the collective then wrote was a "shift in focus from a local feminist magazine to a lesbian feminist journal for the South."[4][6] By this time, the collective's membership had steadily dwindled, and at the time of this new direction consisted primarily of Susan Ballinger, Minnie Bruce Pratt, Mab Segrest, and Cris South.[3]

The journal ceased publication as a Southern journal in 1982. The remaining collective members sought new publishers for Feminary, and ultimately handed the publication over to a group located in San Francisco. While the San Francisco group had ambitions to produce a version of Feminary as a "national magazine with an international perspective," they ultimately only produced two issues from before shuttering permanently in 1985.[3]

Feminary's move to become a literary journal meant that it no longer provided timely news and group announcements to the Research Triangle area. In 1981, former Feminary members Nancy Blood and Leslie Kahn, as well as six other women, founded a new newsletter for the Triangle area titled simply The Newsletter. This publication was meant to more closely follow the format of the original Feminist Newsletter, and ran from 1981 to 2001.[3]:84–85[5]

Membership and organization

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Throughout its history, Feminary was organized collectively, rather than hierarchically. [...]. Membership waned at several points, with current members repeatedly printing notices asking for help publishing future issues.

Feminary mostly had no external funding, and sustained itself via individual subscriptions.[citation needed] In some cases, members surreptitiously used resources from local universities to print the journal.[3][7] Some issues were printed by Whole Women Press, a lesbian feminist printer founded by former Feminary members Nancy Blood and Leslie Kahn.[3][8][9] At one point, the magazine received a grant of $1,200 from the Coordinating Council of Literary Magazines.[3]:72

Legacy

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Feminary was an exemplar of the women in print movement, and is often compared to fellow Southern lesbian feminist publication Sinister Wisdom.[2][10][11][12]

The magazine was particularly noted for its representation of feminism and lesbianism in the United States South. [...].

Feminary is also remembered for taking a relatively strong anti-racist and class-conscious stance as a publication within the women's liberation movement and the lesbian feminist movement, both of which have been criticized for preoccupation with white, middle class women. [...].

Many members of the Feminary collective continued to engage in public scholarship and activism. Elizabeth Knowlton, who left Feminary when it was still The Feminist Newsletter, later moved to Atlanta and co-founded the Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance.[13][14] Mab Segrest founded North Carolinians Against Racist and Religious Violence (NCARRV), an anti-racist organizing group, and Southerners On New Ground (SONG), a social justice organization.[15] Segrest continues to write and has published several books, including Memoir of a Race Traitor, which won the 1994 Lambda Literary Editor's Choice Award.[16][17] Minnie Bruce Pratt continued to write, teach, and organize. [...].[18]

References

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  1. 1 2 Schultz, Hooper (2026-02-08). ""Watching the Ferns Uncurl": Minnie Bruce Pratt and Lesbian-Feminist Community Building in North Carolina". Journal of Lesbian Studies.
  2. 1 2 3 Cantrell, Jaime (2015). "SUBSCRIBE to Feminary! Producing Community, Region, and Archive". In Stone, Amy L.; Cantrell, Jaime (eds.). Out of the Closet, Into the Archives: Researching Sexual History. State University of New York Press. pp. 311–335.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 Gilbert, Jennifer L. (April 1993). "Feminary" of Durham-Chapel Hill: Building Community Through a Feminist Press. Master's Thesis, Duke University.
  4. 1 2 3 Atwell, Elizabeth. "Feminary: A Feminist Journal for the South Emphasizing the Lesbian Vision". OutHistory. Retrieved 2026-05-20.
  5. 1 2 "Nancy Blood – Southern Lesbian Feminist Activist Herstory Project". Retrieved 2026-05-20.
  6. "A Feminist Journal for the South Emphasizing the Lesbian Vision". Feminary. 9 (2). 1978.
  7. Heying, Silas Margaret; Mixon, Amanda (2026-03-18). "The Feminary Re-Collective: A Roundtable with Eleanor Holland, Helen Langa, Mab Segrest, and Cris South". Journal of Lesbian Studies. 0 (0): 1–25. doi:10.1080/10894160.2026.2644042. ISSN 1089-4160. PMID 41847839.
  8. "Explore the Exhibit: Arts + Culture | Love and Liberation: A History of Durham LGBTQ+". durhamlgbtqhistory.org. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  9. "Whole Woman Press" (PDF). Feminary. 9 (1): 48–49. 1978 via Love + Liberation: A History of LGBTQ+ Durham.
  10. Harker, Jaime (2018). The Lesbian South: Southern Feminists, the Women in Print Movement, and the Queer Literary Canon. University of North Carolina Press. doi:10.5149/9781469643373_harker. ISBN 978-1-4696-4335-9.
  11. Cherry, Wynn (2000). ""Hearing Me Into Speech:" Lesbian Feminist Publishing in North Carolina". North Carolina Literary Review (9): 82–90.
  12. Powell, Tamara M. (2000). "Look What Happened Here: North Carolina's Feminary Collective". North Carolina Literary Review (9): 91–102.
  13. "Elizabeth W. Knowlton oral history interview, February 16, 1998 (Biography)". ArchivesSpace at GSU Library. Archived from the original on 2024-02-27. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  14. Sahar, Lee (2022-03-08). "The Atlanta Lesbian Feminist Alliance". Atlanta History Center. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  15. "Mab Segrest – Southern Lesbian Feminist Activist Herstory Project". slfaherstoryproject.org. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  16. Admin, Lambda (1995-07-15). "7th Annual Lambda Literary Awards". Lambda Literary. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  17. "Memoir of a Race Traitor". The New Press. Retrieved 2026-05-21.
  18. Rubino, Stef (2023-07-10). "Remembering Minnie Bruce Pratt as a Radical Southern Femme". Autostraddle. Retrieved 2026-05-22.