Fairy Tales and Feminism: Christina Collins on the Need to Retell
Fairy tales—a term that might not be considered “literary” in some circles, but So to Speak’s assistant editor Christina Elaine Collins will argue with you for days on end about the artistic, social, and various other values of fairy tales and of the importance of retelling them.
The Way of an Unlikely Feminist
At the age of forty-five, my devotedly Catholic maternal grandmother gave birth to her thirteenth and final child, a girl.
WILD, BUT NOT LOST: A Review by Sheila McMullin
Melissa Schuppe’s debut chapbook Wild, But Not Lost(Finishing Line Press, 2013) finds itself in the good company of poets’ Sarah Vap, Rachel Zucker, and Arielle Greenberg: women writing motherhood and sharing women’s multifaceted experiences in the age of choice and women’s equality.
On being silenced
As women, what keeps us from writing our hearts out and feeling valued as writers by the rest of the world?
Learning from the New Kings and Queens
This past summer, I visited a private school in Greenwich, Connecticut that sat atop a hill surrounded by acres of sculpted lawn.
No Excuses Remain: Dr. Anita Taylor on What’s Really at Stake with the Redskins’ Name
What’s in a Name? That question served as my introduction to feminist theory. And it remains vital.