Feminism: February 2007.
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Contributor-submitted biographical information:

David Barnes
David Barnes has been pursuing photography seriously for about six years, both as an artist and a professional. His art photography has been shown in several galleries in the Boston area and has been accepted to seven juried exhibitions, winning "Best in show" in one of them and "Honorable mention" in three others. He also has pieces on permanent exhibit in Provincetown, Madison Wisconsin, and Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. Barnes is the recipient of several grants and artistic awards including 2 Fellowships to the MacDowell Artist Colony, grants from the Pennsylvania Council On the Arts and Pew Charitable Trust. You can learn more about him at davidbarnesphotography.com.



Kirstin Chen
A graduate of Stanford University, Kirstin recently moved to Boston where she is pursuing an MFA degree at Emerson College.

Amy L. Clark
Amy L. Clark is a writer and teacher of writing. She received her BA in Creative Writing and Literature from Bard College and then her Masters of Fine Arts in Creative Writing from Emerson College in 2004, where she was awarded the first place prize for graduate non-fiction. Amy is a professor of composition at Pine Manor College and has taught creative writing at the Cambridge Center for Adult Education for several years. She has had fiction published in several literary magazines, including McSweeney's Internet Tendency, Quick Fiction, and Louis Liard, and her work appears in the anthology Brevity and Echoes. Amy has always secretly wanted to be an astronaut.

Sarah Einstein
Sarah Einstein lives in Morgantown, WV with her husband Scotti, step-daughter Lucy, and three very bad dogs. She runs the nation's oldest drop-in center for adults with mental illness, The Friendship Room, where she continues to work towards a world where everyone—regardless of gender, race, age, disability, or faith—is treated with equality and dignity. Her work has also appeared in Kestrel and Conflict Resolution Notes.

Kate Morris
Kate Morris is pursuing an MLitt in Modernities at the University of Glasgow. Though physically living in Glasgow, a significant part of her mental life is dedicated to dreams of Montreal and, more specifically, a Stanley cup win for the Habs. She is the sort of person who should not read the newspaper with her morning coffee because it tends to make her angry. But she is also the type of person who, knowing this about herself, reads it anyway. She has written critical pieces on HIV/AIDS awareness campaigns, the war in Iraq as media spectacle, Bruce Nauman, and post-structuralist literary theory.  She is a sometime poet, avid letter writer and anonymous performance artist.     

Josie Schoel
Josie Schoel is a Brooklyn-based poet whose poems have appeared in a number of journals and magazines. She is a 2003 recipient of an American Academy of Poets award. Originally from Gloucester, MA, she holds a BA in Literature from Bard College. She is a literary agent at the Frances Goldin Literary Agency.



Elizabeth Stark
Elizabeth Stark has a BA from Tufts University, and will graduate with an MFA in fiction writing from Emerson College in Spring 2007. Currently, she occupies herself by reading great contemporary women writers and writing stern letters to elected officials and newpaper writers with whom she disagrees. In her remaining time, Elizabeth enjoys samurai film, soapmaking, and fighting consumer culture.

Donna Karen Weaver
Donna Karen Weaver is a graduate of the University of Pittsburgh. She was awarded the Scott Turow Prize for fiction in 2003, and was accepted to the Cave Canem Summer Workshop in 2005. Her work has appeared in or is forthcoming from Poetry Motel, Controlled Burn, Drunken Boat, Ghoti, Pebble Lake Review, Pavement Saw, and others. She was recently named a finalist in Drunken Boat’s Panliterary Poetry Award. She is editor-in-chief of Caketrain Journal and Press.

Leonore Wilson
Leonore Wilson lives in the wilds of Northern California. She is the mother of three sons in their 20s. Her work has been in such places as Quarterly West, 13th Moon, TRIVIA: Voices of Feminism, Third Coast, and Madison Review. She has won fellowships to the University of Utah and Villa Montalvo. Feminists she deeply admires: Brenda Hillman, Adrienne Rich, Carole Maso, Marina Tsvetaeva, Cindy Sheehan.



 

 

 

 

 

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