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May
10, 2005
By Ellen Barber
Since its beginnings as a photocopied newsletter for
the Women’s Studies Center, Iris has evolved into a glossy
magazine whose national readership makes it unique among
student-produced publications.
Now in its 25th year, it continues to mine new territory
while holding fast to its original mission — “a
commitment to reaching out to and widening the community
of people who are actively working on creating a more equitable
university, community, society,” said Sharon Davie,
director of the Women’s Center.
Founded in 1980 by Davie and then-doctoral student Caroline
Gebhard, Iris today has a circulation of about 2,000.
That may be small, but it packs a punch. The journal’s content “has
always been strong, honest, smart and quite different from
anything you’d find in mainstream magazines,” said
coordinating editor Gina Welch, who graduated from U.Va.
with a master’s in fiction writing last year. Past
issues have explored such topics as addiction, the banishment
of Barbie dolls from Iran, feminisim in primetime television,
menopause, money, scars, vampire movies and weight.
Early on, Iris published pieces that got the journal
noticed by the likes of the Chicago Tribune, Harper’s and Ms.
Magazine. And in 1993, it earned the “Best in Virginia” award
in the black-and-white magazine category from the Richmond
chapter of the International Association of Business Communicators.
Some of the essays that appeared in its pages have since
been anthologized: “Demilitarized Security: Women Oppose
U.S. Militarism in East Asia,” by Gwyn Kirk and Margo
Okazama-Rey, appeared in the fall 1999 issue and was later
included in the book, “Frontline Feminisms: Women,
War and Resistance.”
Contributors to Iris include nationally known writers
and artists — such as feminist theorist Jennifer Baumgardner,
scholar Margaret Stetz, cartoonist Linda Sherman, photographer
Mary Motley Kalergis and poet Gregory Orr, who is on U.Va.’s
English department faculty — as well as other faculty,
students, alumni and writers from around the country.
Now, Iris is aiming for a bigger audience and has
plans to involve more alumni in its creation.
And by keeping
its content
and design fresh, Welch said she believes “Iris can
be a staple read for progressive young women.”
Students produce Iris biannually through a three-credit
course, “Feminist
Publishing and Scholarship,” which combines “rigorous
academic work” with the “hands-on, A-to-Z putting
together of this journal,” Davie said.
To
read excerpts or to subscribe, check out Iris online at
http://iris.virginia.edu.
Reprinted from the summer 2005 Alumni News, available May
16.
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