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Mend my dress

Author: Chestnut, Neely Bat.


Full title: Mend my dress: collected zines 2005-2007
"A collection of zines Neelybat wrote in 2005 through 2007. Includes Mend My Dress 1-6, the one shot Dead Stepdad, in English and Spanish and her half of a split called Grit and Glitter. Chestnut's Zines are well respected in the zine community and her zines cover issues ranging from incest, self-harm, the riot grrrl movement, feminism, friendship, fairytale, and healing as she reflects on her childhood and coming-of-age." - Publisher's description.


Table of Contents:
Introduction
Mend my dress 1
Dear stepdad
Querido padrastro
Mend my dress 2
Mend my dress 3: (the little match girl)
Mend my dress 4: (leporiphobia: fear of rabbits)
Grit and glitter
Mend my dress 5: girl love, girl revolution
Mend my dress 6: bathed in blood.

At the feminist bootcamp

Alternate title: Menstrual cups through the ages


Author: Loge, Lilli. Author listed as: Dr. Paraphylia.


Pagination includes cover. Author listed as: Dr. Paraphylia. "We're not here to enjoy ourselves!!!"

MOSS: perspectives on Portland's Environment

Author(s): Logan, Emily,


Summer 2010 "Moss is a zine based in Portland, Oregon that features fiction and nonfiction about a single environmental topic in each issue. This issue focuses on water, serving as a primer and treatise about the political and ethical issues involved in an urban area like Portland. There's a story told through an interview between an activist behind bars and an Oregonian reporter. Another bit chronicles a young journalists attempt to cover a story he didn't yet feel qualified for - endangered salmon and a logging company leaking sediment into the stream. It was a young man's lesson about ecology firsthand and how dire the consequences are for our environment. There's also a guide to setting up your own rain garden, a mild amount of poetry, restoration of the Klamath River valley basin water supply, the diminished quality of Portland's drinking water supply, and so much. It's a rushing, fascinating journey here, folks!" - From publisher

Mindful occupation: rising up without burning out

Author: Mindful Occupation (Organization).


This booklet was made by a group of radical mental health activists from all over North America - Back cover. Includes bibliographical references (pages 79-82).

Owning the means of production

Author: Killian-Moore, Allen.


Full title: Owning the means of production: the story of Jefferson People's House: pocket lessons for your worker co-op!
Have you ever thought about founding and running a successful worker-owned co-op? It takes more than just getting together with some friends and agreeing to share the work and profits. A business—even a small, unconventional one—requires planning, structure, and good business sense. Based on the trials and tribulations of the Jefferson People's House in Duluth, Minnesota, this guide will provide you with the tools to help start your own co-op. - From publisher

Genderfailz #2, Call outs & clever titles

Author: Kemp, Alix, 1987-.


The first issue of this perzine by a transgender man in his early 20s is laid out in a series of journal entries and discusses topics like name changes, finding a trans-friendly doctor, medication, and Canada's requirement in order to receive hormone therapy one must intend to have a complete surgical sex change. The zine also includes pictures of identification cards and explanations of gender reassignment surgery.

Jane: documents from Chicago's clandestine abortion service, 1968-1973

Author(s): Arcana, Judith. Galatzer-Levy, Jeanne. Surgal, Ruth. Stern, Meredith. Chicago Women's Liberation Union Herstory Project.


"Special thanks to Judith Arcana, Jeanne Galatzer-Levy, Ruth Surgal, the CSLU (Chicago Women's Liberation Union) Herstory Project, Merrydeath Stern, and justseeds." Brochures and pamphlets from Jane, an abortion service in Chicago in the late 1960s and early 1970s, appear (rekeyed) in this political zine. There are also interviews with women who worked with Jane and a discussion of feminist politics and abortion, especially with regard to race and class and police persecution. "Several documents by these fabulous "Jane" women talking about the group's illegal activities: learning how to perform abortions, teaching themselves and others the skill, and ultimately providing abortions (and support) for thousands of women in the Chicago area. Truly impressive work that was equally risky and still relevant to learn about today." - From publisher


Table of Contents:
Introduction / firestarter press
Abortion: a woman's decision, a woman's right / Abortion Counseling Service
Organizing a clandestine abortion service / Ruth Surgal and the CWLU Herstory Committee
She said before 1973 / Judith Arcana
On the job with Jane / Jeanne Galatzer-Levy and the CWLU Herstory Committee
Feminist politics and abortion in the USA / a discussion with Judith Arcana.

I.W.W. songs to fan the flames of discontent

Author: Industrial Workers of the World.


A reprint of the nineteenth edition (1923) of the famous "Little Red Song Book. "Undoubtedly the most popular book in American labor history, the I.W.W.'s Little Red Song Book has been a staple item on picket lines and at other workers' gatherings for generations, and has gone through numerous editions. As a result of I.W.W. efforts to keep up with the times, however, recent versions of the songbook have omitted most of the old-time favorites, especially the raucous lyrics of the free-spirited hoboes who made up such a large portion of the union's membership in its heyday. For example, recent versions have left out all but a few of the celebrated songs of Joe Hill, T-Bone Slim, Ralph Chaplin, and other pioneer bards of the One Big Union - and many of the few remaining older songs have been abridged or otherwise modified. The steadily mounting interest in Wobbly history and culture warrants this facsimile edition of a classic Little Red Song Book from the union's Golden Age. Reprinted here is the Nineteenth Edition, originally issued in 1923, the year the I.W.W. reached its peak membership. Of the fifty-two songs in this book, the overwhelming majority have not been included in the I.W.W.'s own songbooks for many years. Here are such classics as Joe Hill's "John Golden and the Lawrence Strike," "We Will Sing One Song," "Scissor Bill," "The Tramp," and others; T-Bone Slim's "I'm Too Old to Be a Scab," "Mysteries of a Hobo's Life," "I Wanna Free Miss Liberty," and others; Ralph Chaplin's "All Hell Can't Stop Us," "Up from Your Knees," "May Day Song," and more; and other songs by C.G. Allen, Richard Brazier, Pat Brennan, James Connelly, Laura Payne Emerson, and many others. Ninety years ago these songs were sung with gusto in Wobbly halls and hobo jungles from Brooklyn to San Pedro. And they're still fun to sing today!

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