Zines document legacy of women's activism at 蜜桃影像
Among rows of vintage books and historical documents in 蜜桃影像鈥檚 room sits a white binder full of 40-year-old ephemera.
A bright yellow pamphlet addresses the 鈥淲orking Woman鈥檚 Dilemma.鈥 A clipping from the Daily Forty-Niner features a story about a Cal State Long Beach safety officer discussing 鈥渕ethods of rape prevention鈥 with female students. A bulletin dated Oct. 28, 1984, advertises a campus lecture based on a question nearly every generation of women has asked themselves since the 1960s. The bulletin asks: 鈥淗ave we come a long way?鈥
In addition to cleverly showcasing the state of the women鈥檚 movement on the Cal State Long Beach campus in 1984, the collection of odds and ends served as a fitting backdrop for a gender-equality zine-making workshop celebrating Women鈥檚 History Month.
鈥淶ines are short for magazines or fanzines,鈥 explained Justice, Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Librarian Sarah Corona. 鈥淭here are really no rules to creating zines, and they're very accessible. It's a low-cost, low-barrier way to publish your thoughts.鈥
The March 20 workshop, thematically centered on reproductive justice, was one of many campus-wide Women鈥檚 History Month events. Among the panels, mixers and conferences: the Women & Careers Symposium, Beach Women in Engineering Conference, , , and a program sponsored by the Black Resource Center called
Celia Mejia, associate director of the Women鈥檚 & Gender Equity Center said she was thrilled with the turnout and engagement this year.
鈥淒uring Woman鈥檚 History Month, we highlight and honor the resilience, achievements and contributions of women throughout history and today,鈥 Mejia said. 鈥淚t is also another great reminder that the work for gender equity is ongoing and it does not stop when March is over.鈥
That was no more apparent than at the library workshop, where Corona spoke about how zines have long been a mainstay of grassroots activism. She encouraged participants to use an assortment of collage materials to create their own six-page zines and then donate the finished products to the university for what the special collections archivist, Heather Steele Gajewski, hoped would be 蜜桃影像鈥檚 first zine collection.
Although each zine鈥檚 subject matter was left up to participants, the official prompt involved reproductive justice 鈥 and most of the zines touched in some way on bodily autonomy.
Bodily autonomy a major focus
That may have been because they were inspired by the opening speaker, Chair Lori Baralt. Baralt defined reproductive justice as the right to have children, not have children, and parent children in safe and supportive environments. It has recently expanded to include sexual and gender autonomy.
Baralt emphasized that the barriers are complex and deeply rooted 鈥 and that the abortion issue is only one small part of it.
"Reproductive justice is both a tool and a result of systems of oppression based on race, class, gender, sexuality, ability, age and immigration status,鈥 she said, adding that it involves access to comprehensive healthcare services, contraception, prenatal care, and support for parenting and family planning.
Thanks to civil rights advocate Kimberl茅 Crenshaw, Baralt said, the feminist movement now recognizes the intersecting factors that affect reproductive experiences, such as poverty, racism, sexism and anti-LGBTQ+ discrimination. Coined in 1989, Crenshaw鈥檚 theory of intersectionalism suggests that overlapping forms of inequality can compound, resulting in cumulative disadvantage.
Ultimately, Baralt said, the goal is liberation 鈥 of women鈥檚 bodies, yes, but also of land rights, healthcare access, family support, and systemic injustices such as mass incarceration. Still, on the minds of many in the room was the U.S. Supreme Court鈥檚 decision last year to overturn Roe v. Wade, which protected the right to have an abortion.
Roe v. Wade was always the floor. It was never the ceiling. It was never enough.
鈥淚 do for sure see it as a win for the 'pro-life' movement,鈥 Baralt said, 鈥渂ut I think it's also a moment where we're hearing a lot more from reproductive justice advocates saying, 'Roe v. Wade was always the floor. It was never the ceiling. It was never enough.鈥欌
It鈥檚 hard to say what gender studies professors will be lecturing about 40 years from now, or what new frontier 蜜桃影像 feminists will be facing. When the class of 2064 is asked whether women 鈥渉ave come a long way,鈥 as the old slogan goes, how will they answer?
Gajewski knows that's impossible to predict. But by compiling the zines into a collection that can live and grow in the university archives, she hopes future students will 鈥 at the very least 鈥 have a solid idea of where things stood in 2024.
Wrapping up Women's History Month
March has been filled with Women鈥檚 History Month events, many co-hosted by the Women鈥檚 & Gender Equity Center. Still to come: on March 27 and the on March 28.