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Browse the American Women collection

Title Description Keywords Genre PRA Archive # StoreItemsort descending
The Book of hags / by Deena Metzger ; adapted and directed by Everett Frost.

A novel-in-progress by Deena Metzger dramatized for radio by Everett Frost. The work is a feminist testament to the attempt by women to join inner to outer experience so as to overcome a world conditioned by murder, rape, death, cancer and madness. The drama focuses on four women - Diana, the writer; Arda, the witness; Ana, the survivor; and Alma, the silent history - who become the voices of voiceless women, making desperate conversations and writing letters which keep them alive. Partially financed by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts.

Cast: Narrator: Candace De Puy. Diana: Maureen McIlroy. Ana: Naomi Pollack. Alma: Judy Chaikin. Erick: Ray Tatar. Juan: Mike Hodel. Arda: Eve Brenner. Miguel: Ray Tatar. Male voices: Ray Tatar, Mike Hodel, Everett Frost. Producer/director: Everett Frost. Assistant producer/director: Leni Isaacs. Technical director and recording: Peter E. Sutheim. Music performed and arranged by Cantucha: Carol Clary, Cindy Harding, Margaret Towner. Special thanks to the people who made this recording possible, among them: Mary Mann, Faith Wilding, Ricki Arnold, Mercedes Everett.

Frost, Everett C., Radio adaptations., Metzger, Deena., American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982 American Women -- Radio, American Women -- Authors and journalists BC2920 The Book of hags / by Deena Metzger ; adapted and directed by Everett Frost. (CD)
Adrienne Rich reads from Susan Griffin's "Woman and Nature"

Adrienne Rich (1928 - 2012), poet and author, reads excerpts from Susan Griffin's Woman and Nature: The Roaring Inside Her (New York: Harper & Row, 1978), a book she introduces as being "essential reading." She reads first from the book's introduction, which speaks on the subject of challenging the prevailing androcentric world view. In the book, Griffin explains that the feminist revolution removes men from the center of all things, that is masculine values are dislodged. The feminist revolution of the 1970s is compared to the Copernican revolution of the 17th century. She then reads a selection of poems from the book. Venue and date of recording unknown.

American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Rich, Adrienne, 1929-2012, Griffin, Susan., Women authors American Women -- Authors and journalists, American Women -- Poetry IZ0355 Adrienne Rich (CD)
The Lesbian Show: September 9, 1980 - GALA lesbian pride week poetry reading

Recording of lesbian poets reading as part of Gay and Lesbian Alliance (GALA)'s Lesbian Pride Week celebrations, recorded on June 28th, 1980. Jane Creighton reads "Song for Love Has No Object", "Ceres in an Open Field", "Thinking About Her", and "Naked and Rosy"; Fran Winant reads from her book "Looking at Women" two poems, "Happy New Year", "Letters by Eleanor Roosevelt"; Lorraine Currelley reads "Intercourse", "Midnight Lady Life Flute", and a poem dedicated to Salsa Soul Sisters; Joan Nestle reads "The Bathroom Line", Shelley Neiderbach reads "By Our Light", "Philologies", "Edinburgh", "Morning Coffee", "Women Writers Workshop", "Vagina Dentata", "13 Things That Drive Women Crazy", "Calendar", "For You Now Sleeping", "Elegy for Anne Sexton", "Thanksgiving"; Rebecca Lewin reads "Woman with Halls That Flutter" and "Olivia"; Donna Allegra reads "When People Ask" and "From the Temple of the Goddess"; and Ellen Marie Bissert reads "Sharing", "Ode to My True Nature", and "A Romance." No intro. Originally cataloged as IZ1061.

American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Lesbian poets, Lesbian authors American Women -- Lesbians, American Women -- Poetry IZ1061.01 GALA lesbian pride week poetry reading (CD)
Voices of lesbian pride

A celebration of the 10th annual Lesbian Pride Week, featuring poets & artists who will be appearing during this year's events. Alix Dobkin's song "Women Loving" opens the program. Jewelle Gomez reads her poem "Flamingos and Bears". Eleanor Cooper of Lesbian Feminist Liberation talks about Lesbian Pride Week through the years and about the importance of lesbian pride. Ellen Marie Bissert reads her poem "Ode to My True Nature". Karen Brown, writer and director of "As the Dyke Turns: A Lesbian Soap Opera About Coming Out", talks about the play. Linda Grishman reads "She Keeps Coming Up the Stairs". Stephanie Glickman talks about her play "The Paris Project", a project of the Sewer Theater. Clip of the Radical Lesbian Feminist Terrorist Comedy Group performing at the previous year's Lesbian Pride Week. Sunny Wainwright reads "Barnwood Sunday Afternoon (for Peggy)." Arlene Goldberg reads "Bow River, Banff, 1977 (for Myra)." Jewelle Gomez and Devine talk about the Gap Tooth Girlfriends writing workshop and poetry performance group. Jewelle Gomez reads "For Mia Cita". Cooper wraps up the program. Presented by WBAI's Women's Department.

American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Lesbian poets, Lesbian authors American Women -- Lesbians, American Women -- Poetry IZ1068 Voices of lesbian pride (CD)
The Velvet Sledgehammer: April 22, 1981

Poetry reading by Audre Lorde. Recorded on December 12, 1980 at Barnard College, this poetry reading was a benefit for the Women's Experimental Theater of New York. Lorde reads several poems and excerpts from The Cancer Journals, which had been recently published. Audre Lorde is introduced by WET founder, Sandra Segal and Clare Coss. Program recorded and presented by the WBAI Women's Department. Produced by Eileen Zalisk.

American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Lorde, Audre, Lesbian poets, African American women poets American Women -- Lesbians, American Women -- Poetry IZ1078 The Velvet Sledgehammer / Audre Lorde poetry reading produced by Zalisk (CD)
The Velvet Sledgehammer: March 7, 1985

Women's news with Judy Pasternak for the week of March 7, 1985, incorporating KPFA's Majority Report. Subjects discussed: Katherine Davenport reports on a new law in Montana requiring insurance companies to charge men and women the same rates for the same coverage, including an interview with Ann Brodsky of the Women's Lobbyist Fund in Helena, Montana (00:04:42); Ginny Burson and Karen Sondheim on women's occupational safety and health issues (00:11:23); interview by Mimi Rosenberg with Eileen Carr and Sheila Thornton, the wives of two striking British coalminers (00:15:57); Katherine Davenport interviews Nikki Craft of the Preying Mantis Women's Brigade and Citizens for Media Responsibility on the proposed new ordinance in Los Angeles that would declare pornography a violation of women's civil rights and the ACLU's Janlori Goldman on the Minnesota Civil Liberties Union' appeal of Minneapolis' "Opaque Cover" ordinance requiring obscene materials in bookstores to kept in opaque sleeves (00:33:22); Pasternak interviews Wendy Sanford and Norma Swenson of the Boston Women's Health Collective and two of the authors of the revised version of the classic women's self-help book, The new our bodies, ourselves (Simon and Schuster, 1985) (00:46:40), on why they chose to write a new edition and on the evolution of women's health and medical discourse; Rose Jordan with news for the lesbian community, including Katherine Davenport on Oklahoma City's statute regulating the free speech of gay and lesbian teachers, Nancy Langer from Lambda Legal Defense about Texas Tech students being barred from starting a gay group on campus, Carol Bellamy on the acquisition of the building in which the Lesbian & Gay Community Services Center of New York now resides, Susan Cavin from "The Big Apple Dyke" about the lesbian presence in the anti-apartheid movement (01:08:17); notes from the Women's Community Bulletin Board (01:20:49).

American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Feminism, Lesbians, Radio news programs American Women -- Feminism, American Women -- Lesbians IZ1095 The velvet sledgehammer (CD)
Art Against Apartheid: A commemoration for the Soweto Massacre

An evening to commemorate the Soweto Uprising which took place on June 16, 1984. Tracie Jones reads poetry and a representative of an African National Congress women's group discusses demonstrations in Harlem, as well as international and UN pressure on the South African government to end apartheid. Other female poets, including June Jordan, share their works.

American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Anti-apartheid movement., Apartheid -- South Africa., South Africa--Poetry American Women -- Women of Color and discrimination, American Women -- Activists IZ1152 Art Against Apartheid: A commemoration for the Soweto Massacre (CD)
Nice Jewish girls

Excerpts from a reading by women whose work appears in Nice Jewish Girls: A Lesbian Anthology, ed. Evelyn Torton Beck, published by Persephone Press (Watertown, MA), 1982. Recorded June 16, 1982 at WomanBooks in New York City. Irena Klepfisz introduces the evening with a message about the crisis in the Middle East. Features readings by Bernice Mennis, Evelyn "Evie" Beck, Irena Klepfisz, Gloria Greenfield, and Melanie Kaye. Produced by Shelley Messing. Contains sensitive language.

American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Jewish literature., Lesbian authors, Jewish lesbians, Beck, Evelyn Torton American Women -- Authors and journalists, American Women -- Lesbians IZ1220 Nice Jewish girls (CD)
Two women singers / Casse Culver and Willie Tyson

Casse Culver and Willie Tyson, two lesbian folk singers, perform at an unknown venue. They perform "The Bloods", "Don't Put Her Down", "Truck Drivin' Woman", and "Levee Blues." Extract from a longer performance. See also IZ1069, digitized as part of the American Women project.

American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Lesbian musicians, Tyson, Willie, Culver, Casse. American Women -- Music and musicians, American Women -- Lesbians IZ1238 Two women singers / Casse Culver and Willie Tyson (CD)
Rita Mae Brown at the Woman's Building

Writer and activist Rita Mae Brown (1944 - ) delivers a speech at the Woman's Building in Los Angeles on July 4, 1976. Brown talks about the way both men and women suffer under the patriarchy through pornographic violence and nostalgia in the mass media. She tells the audience that "you've got to become an actor, not a reactor" and that the Equal Rights Amendment is a "worn-out issue" meant to distract from more pressing issues. Brown also calls for the feminist movement to establish a public policy regarding violence. The author takes audience questions and also reads several poems (both her own and others') and a lengthy excerpt from her novel <i>In Her Day</i>. Recorded by Annette Hunt.

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American Women Making History and Culture: 1963-1982, Brown, Rita Mae., Woman's Building (Los Angeles, Calif.), Lesbian authors, Hunt, Annette. American Women -- Authors and journalists, American Women -- Lesbians KZ1213 Rita Mae Brown at the Women's Building (CD)
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