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2 result(s) for "Malayalam literature Periodicals"
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New and Newly Discovered Periodicals
I happened upon this online periodical with its rather nondescriptive name some time ago, while writing a website review on size acceptance (see Feminist Collections v.24, nos.3-4, Spring-Summer 2003, pp.13-19). My Google search results (for \"feminism\" + \"size acceptance\") included a link to the essay \"Fat and Feminism\" by Gael McGregor (EM v.1, no.2; archived at http://www.expositorymagazine.net/fatnfeminism.php). EM isn't just about that topic, although publisher and cofounder [Tina Coggins] is a longtime size-acceptance advocate and the attitude is visible not only in occasional articles but in the statement on the home page that \"[t]his website supports diversity: diversity in feminist theory and thought, race, gender, ability, size and sexual orientation.\" Coggins wrote in the premiere issue (April 2001) that EM's goal was \"to bridge the gap between various `flavors' of feminism...to have a multitude of views, because feminism cannot fit into a neat little box...\"; and to be \"a place where you can read a book review by a Third Wave feminist, an opinion piece by a Radical feminist, an essay by an Egalitarian feminist, and then maybe finish up with a poem written by a Liberal feminist -- male or female, young, old, or anywhere in-between.\" Another academic journal from Haworth, with the familiar editorial structure, format, size, typeface, reference style, and price range. This one aims to rectify the absence, to date, of any \"peer-reviewed journal dedicated specifically and only to issues related to child custody.\" It is edited by [Leslie M. Drozd], a clinical and forensic psychologist who has written on domestic violence and other issues related to children and divorce; Drozd's editorial board is still being formed. The first issue (145 pages) includes \"Integrity and Transparency: A Commentary on Record Keeping in Child Custody Evaluations,\" by David A. Martindale; \"Incorporating the Principles of Scientifically Based Child Interviews into Family Law Cases,\" by Kathryn Kuehnle, Lyn Greenberg, and Michael C. Gottlieb; \"Child Protection and Child Custody: Domestic Violence, Abuse, and Other Issues of Child Protection,\" by Toby G. Kleinman; and more. Includes book reviews. The July 2003 issue is entirely devoted to short fiction by women (thirty-four stories) and is introduced by an extensive overview of the history of women's writing in India. Previous issues (Volumes I and II are helpfully indexed on the website; a complete e-version in PDF files is also indicated, although I could not bring those up with either of my browsers) included articles with such wide-ranging and intriguing titles as \"Mahatma Gandhi And Women's Emancipation,\" \"Women's Historiography,\" \"Amartya Sen's Development Perspective: A View From Kerala,\" \"Depiction Of Power Relations In The Malayalam Novel,\" \"Globalization In The Health Sector,\" \"Towards A Health Agenda For Women In Sex Work,\" and \"Swami Vivekananda On The Women Question,\" as well as short stories, poems, a play, interviews, autobiographies, and book reviews.