Harris’ memoir of the 2024 election shows how unfree she was both as vice president and as Democratic presidential nominee.
The media reception of Febos’ new memoir has focused on the shock value of her decision to give up sex for a year, but the book offers surprising insights about community and feminism.
A new show highlights the work of WSW, which has brought more than 5,000 artists to its campus to work in printmaking, hand papermaking, letterpress printing, photography, book arts, and ceramics.
As we approach what would have been Toni Morrison’s 92nd birthday, the author reckons with the deep impact of Morrison and her work, and living with the loss of this towering literary and cultural presence.
In 1962, the Environmental Protection Agency did not yet exist, there was little public awareness about environmental issues, and corporate polluters practiced unfettered use of pesticides with little regulation.
The author, Wells’ great-granddaughter, aims to introduce the journalist, activist, and anti-lynching leader “to a younger generation and other people who might not be as familiar with her life.”
These recent works by Black women historians challenge conventional narratives of the history of the United States.
In her posthumous memoir, Edie Windsor details her vivacious sex life and in the process shatters stereotypes not only about lesbians but about older women in general.
Cooper's new book, Eloquent Rage, explores how women's anger can fuel social and political change.
Why is a woman's truth-telling about sexual violence considered “adult content”?
Two WMC cofounders have a revealing conversation about Gloria Steinem's My Life on the Road.















