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Recognising Female SF/F/H Magazine Editors - oldcharliebrown — LiveJournal [entries|archive|friends|userinfo]
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Recognising Female SF/F/H Magazine Editors [Jan. 7th, 2010|03:21 pm]
oldcharliebrown
There have been quite a few in our history:
 
Mary Gnaedinger, Famous Fantastic Mysteries, 1939-1953 / A. Merritt's Fantasy Magazine, 1949-1950.
Dorothy McIlwraith, Weird Tales, 1940-1954.
Beatrice Mahaffrey, Imagination, 1950; Universe Science Fiction, 1953-1955.
Lila E. Shaffer. Amazing Stories, 1951-1953.
Beatrice Jones, Fantastic Universe, 1954; assisted on Other Worlds, 1950-1955.
Cele Goldsmith, Amazing Stories / Fantastic Stories, 1959-1965.
Judy-Lynn Del Rey, Galaxy, 1969-1973, If, 1969-1973, Worlds of Tomorrow, 1970-1971, Worlds of Fantasy, 1970-1971.
Sharon Moore, Science Fiction Yearbook, 1970
Anne Keffer, Science Fiction Yearbook, 1971.
Cylvia Kleinman, Weird Tales, 1973-1974.
Hilary Bailey, New Worlds, 1974-1976.
Julie Davis, Science Fiction Monthly, 1974-1976 / SF Digest, 1976.
Bonnie Leigland, Galaxy, 1974 / Worlds of Fantasy, 1974.
Pat Cadigan, Shayol, 1977-1985,
Rose Kaplan, Cosmos, 1977.
Lois Wickstrom, Pandora, 1978-1987, with Jean Lorrah after Issue 10.
Elinor Mavor (as Omar Gohagen), Amazing Stories, 1979-1982 / Fantastic, 1979-1980.
Liz Danforth, Sorcerer's Apprentice, 1980-1983.
Ellen Datlow, Omni, 1981-1998 / Event Horizon, 1998-1999 / SciFiction, 2000-2005.
Kathleen Moloney, Asimov's, 1982.
Shawna McCarthy. Asimov's. 1983-1985 / Realms of Fantasy, 1994-present.
Kristine Kathryn Rusch, Pulphouse, 1988-1993 / F&SF, 1991-1997.
Marion Zimmer Bradley, Marion Zimmer Bradley's Fantasy Magazine, 1988-1999.
Diane Walton, OnSpec, 1989-present.
Barbara Roden, All Hallows, 1994-present.
Kelly Link, Lady Churchill's Rosebud Wristlet, 1996-present.
Mary Anne Mohanraj, Strange Horizons, 2000-2003.
Paula Guran, Horror Garage, 2001-2002.
Eileen Gunn Infinite Matrix, 2001-2008.
Liz Holliday, Odyssey, ? ? 
Mary Anne Mohanraj, Strange Horizons, 2000-2003.
Susan Marie Groppi, Strange Horizons, 2000-present.
Chris Heinemann, Strange Horizons, 2000-2003.
Karen Meisner, Strange Horizons, 2003-present.
Sheila Williams, Asimov's, 2004-present.
Beth Wodzinski. Shimmer Magazine, 2005-present.
Wendy S. Delmater, Abyss & Apex, 2005-present
Sara King, Aberrant Dreams, 2007-present.
Ann VanderMeer, Weird Tales, 2007-present.
Hildy Silverman, Space and Time, 2007-present.
Cat Rambo. Fantasy Magazine. 2008-present.

Any I'm missing? I can't access my research volumes right now, so I apologise!
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Comments:
[User Picture]From: ann_leckie
2010-01-08 10:33 pm (UTC)
Neither of our posts specified that the female scholars in question be writing specifically an overview of women editing SF. Moreover, my comment was about women being involved in the field in general--which both books I mention do indeed cover. Larbalestier's "Battle of the Sexes in Science Fiction" also covers it.

You might actually want to read some of those books before you decide what women are and aren't interested in writing about.
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[User Picture]From: bluetyson
2010-01-09 12:08 am (UTC)
It is completely obvious that women are interested in SF. Hardly a relevant point in a discussion about women who edit magazines - which is itself of course evidence of the former. :)

Not too likely to have access to a small press American book that is brand new this year. Aqueduct, along with many other such publishers have no interest in electronic publication, so considerably harder to get outside the US.

As speaking of assumptions, as far as books such as you suggest, there's a good probability I have read more of them than you have. You are talking to someone that had read a few Russ and Le Guin books before he was 10, after all. Unsure how you get 'not read any in general' implication out of 'reading Larbalestier a few days ago'. :)

If you want to take such anecdotes further, I'd seen more than one article in academic databases by female authors talking about the history of women in science fiction that doesn't mention editors at all. Granted most people are more interested in writing about authors, but this is my point.
Even popular writing though. There are bunches of magazines online, quite a few with women in charge. Would have thought this was a topic of interest to them and something would be written about it. Doesn't appear to be so far, though.

There may also be material we are both unaware of in some stray master's thesis or article somewhere, too. If someone knows of such I'd certainly like to read it.
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[User Picture]From: ann_leckie
2010-01-09 12:46 am (UTC)
Once again, I wasn't speaking exclusively of editors, just struck by a thought about women's participation by this particular list.

The participation of women does not seem to be self-evident to a great number of folks who think women had no interest until the late sixties--or who continually claim that science fiction was so much better before women came along and gave it girl cooties.

And you read Russ and LeGuin before you were 10? Gosh, that makes you an expert in women's participation in science fiction and the history of scholarship and debates on the topic! I bow before your omniscience on the topic of what women scholars are interested in! Certainly the fact that you haven't tripped over something means it doesn't exist. Absolutely.

What I was accusing you of not having read was, in fact, the vast majority of writings by women scholars on the history of women's participation in science fiction. Obviously having read Russ and LeGuin when you were a kid means you're utterly conversant on the issue, and I am mortified that I could have been so foolish as to believe otherwise.

Incidentally, the book I read "yesterday" was not either of the Larbalestiers, but Secret Cabal. I would recommend it, except I have a suspicion you'd find some sort of nitpicky detail to disqualify it from actually talking about the things it talks about.
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[User Picture]From: bluetyson
2010-01-09 02:23 am (UTC)
I was speaking exclusively of magazine editors. Amazing, that, in a thread about such. :)

To your crack re: R/LG, no, it means that I am possibly more interested than most.

I have read a LOT of writing on the history of science fiction. As I said, possibly more than you have. This includes the usual suspects Russ, Le Guin, Sargent, Merrick, Merril, Williams, etc. Do you have Sussex's She's Fantastical? :)

It is also likely I have read more actual science fiction by women than you, as opposed to histories, bibliographies, criticism, journal articles, etc.

You are making assumptions again. Why would I have mentioned annoying lack of distribution if I didn't care? I've actually even added the odd thing to the feminist sf wiki in the past. Hardly likely to do that if I didn't give a rat's rear, or was 'refusing to read stuff because of trivialities'. A quite ludicrous statement, even. From vague memory I think I did a list of sword wielding women in SFF for Laura Quilter when she asked on librarything, speaking of nitpicky trivialities I shouldn't care about. I don't think there was anything there about the magazine editor topic either, or at feministsf.org, last time I looked, anyway. Which was a few months ago.

You read Catherine Helen Spence or Rosa Praed? I've put my own time and effort into making some early Australian sf by women available, too. Hardly the act of someone who is only going to indulge in dismissive sneering such as you suggest.

You are getting rather snarky, just because I brought up a perceived lack that probably is an actual lack. That is if the implication is that you have read huge amounts of writing by women about SF/are an expert in such and don't know of such work.
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