Batya Weinbaum

Batya Weinbaum (born Betty Susan Weinbaum in 1952) is an American poet, feminist, artist, editor, and professor. She founded Femspec Journal, and has published 17 books, over 500 articles, essays, poems, reviews, and pieces of short fiction in various publications.[1]

Biography

Weinbaum was born February 2, 1952, in Ann Arbor, Michigan and spent her childhood in Terre Haute, Indiana. Her parents, Barbara Adele Hyman and Jack Gerald Weinbaum, were active in the civil rights movement and the presidential campaigns of John F. Kennedy.

In the late 1970s, Weinbaum voiced feminist views in several articles published in political journals. These included "The Other Side of the Paycheck: Monopoly Capital and the Structure of Consumption," co-authored with Amy Bridges in Monthly Review,[2] "Women in the Transition to Socialism: Perspectives on the Chinese Case," in Review of Radical Political Economics, 1976[3] and "Redefining the Question of Revolution," in Review of Radical Political Economics, 1977.[4]

In 1984, Weinbaum briefly stayed at a commune known as Twin Oaks. Her essay on this experience became a chapter in Rudy Rohrlich and Elaine Hoffman Baruch's book, Women in Search of Utopia: Mavericks and Mythmakers[5] In the early and mid-80s, she attended the Michigan Women's Music Festival and worked on the crew. She wrote the proposal that founded the alternative healing space, Oasis, with Kristi Vogel as a result of activism of alternative healers.

From 1984 to 1986, Weinbaum met and taught courses with Dr. Liz Kennedy at SUNY Buffalo. Her association with Kennedy helped decide Weinbaum's multicultural approach to her academic direction.

In 1997, Weinbaum founded a feminist journal, Femspec, an interdisciplinary journal dedicated to science fiction, fantasy, magic realism, surrealism, myth, folklore and other supernatural genres and continued as editor-in-chief. 2013-2020, she had been operating a feminist art installation project on Isla Mujeres, Mexico.

In 2014, she bought land in Floyd, Virginia where she developed a feminist educational retreat.

After working in Carpinteria at the Pacifica Graduate Institute she wrote a column on transformational palmistry for the Santa Barbara Independent and subsequently published two books based on this column called Opening Palms, and On the Palmist's Road.

Academic career

From 1998 to 2003 at Cleveland State University, Weinbaum taught courses in multicultural literature including other genres, such as theater, poetry and performance art, as well as courses on Shakespeare and Classics. From 2003 to 2007, Weinbaum taught as a peripatetic educator teaching speech and debate and organizing literary events, Beat cafes and Victorian parlors in Cleveland Heights, Ohio. She was also a visiting faculty and curriculum adviser at Pacifica Graduate Institute from 2006 to 2007. This led to a teaching career based on distance learning with a variety of institutions including Gaia University, Ivy Bridge College of Tiffin University, State University of New York's Empire State College Center for Distance Learning and currently the American Public University, American Public University, and Life University. In 2019, Weinbaum was invited to teach Women and Gender Studies at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University.

Critical reception

Choice reviewer S. A. Inness praised Islands of Women and Amazons: Representations and Realities as "especially comprehensive" and found Weinbaum's approach to be "engaging and carefully researched." Utopian Studies contributor Linda L. Kick added, "While Weinbaum admits to having explored only a portion of available literature and cultural practices, readers of her book will be amazed by, and grateful for, the breadth and promise of her interdisciplinary scholarship."

Published works

Books

  • Curious Courtship of Women's Liberation and Socialism, South End Press, 1978, ISBN 9780896080461
  • Island of Floating Women, Clothespin Fever Press, 1994, ISBN 9781878533104
  • Islands of Women and Amazons: Representations and Realities, University of Texas Press, 2000, ISBN 9780292791275
  • Nightmares of Sasha Weitzwoman, Femspec Books, 2010, ISBN 9780983279303
  • Pictures of Patriarchy, South End Press, 1999, ISBN 9780896081611
  • Islands of Women and Amazons: Representations and Realities. Second Edition. 2017
  • Feminist Voices. Seattle: Aqueduct. 2013
  • This Could Happen to You: Post 9-11 Memoir. Femspec Books. 2012
  • El Curioso Noviazgo Entre Feminismo y Socialismo. Madrid: Siglo XXI. 1983

Edited journal issues

  • 1998–present. Femspec, Vol.1.1-22.2. 23.1 is in production.

Edited books

  • Mercer, Naomi, Toward Utopia: Feminist Dystopian Writing and Religious Fundamentalism in Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, Louise Marley's The Terrorists of Irustan, and Marge Piercy's He, She and It, Femspec Books and Productions, 2015
  • IX Chel Press, Issues 1–3, Isla Mujeres

Other writings

According to Gale Contemporary Authors (2009) additional books and other writings have included:

  • Searching for Peace on Hostile Grounds: Interviewing Grassroots Women in Israel, 1989-1999 (2003)
  • Sasha's Harlem (novel; part one of trilogy), Pyx Press 2004.
  • Jerusalem Romance, East Coast Editions (Longmeadow, NY), 1993.
  • Fragments of Motherhood (includes prose), Angel Fish Press (East Montpelier, VT), 1996
  • Mexico in Motion: Actions and Images, Angel Fish Press, 1997

Poetry

Weinbaum has contributed poetry to various periodicals and anthologies.

Biographical and critical sources

Choice, July 2000, S. A. Inness, review of Islands of Women and Amazons: Representations and Realities, p. 223.

Cleveland Plain Dealer, October 8, 2000, Zina Vishnevsky, "Seeking Zena's Sisters in Legend of Amazons."

Journal of Research on Mothering, spring, 2002, Gail M. Lindsay, review of Islands of Women and Amazons.

Lambda Book Report, January–February 1994, Judith Katz, review of The Island of Floating Women, p. 36.

Off Our Backs, August–September 1979, interview with Weinbaum, p. 22; October 2000, Carol Anne Douglas, review of Islands of Women and Amazons, p. 16.

Utopian Studies Journal, Volume 11, number 2, 2000, Linda L. Kick, review of Islands of Women and Amazons, pp. 305–307.

Women and Politics, Volume 2, numbers 1–2, Annette M. Bickel, review of The Curious Courtship of Women's Liberation and Socialism, p. 145

References

  1. "Batya Weinbaum". www.veteranfeministsofamerica.org. Retrieved 2023-07-13.
  2. Weinbaum, Batya; Amy Bridges (July–August 1976). "The Other Side of the Paycheck: Monopoly Capital and the Structure of Consumption". Monthly Review. 28 (3): 88. doi:10.14452/MR-028-03-1976-07_7.
  3. "Women in the Transition to Socialism: Perspectives on the Chinese Case". Review of Radical Political Economics. 8 (1). Spring 1976.
  4. "Redefining the Question of Revolution". Review of Radical Political Economics. 9 (3). Fall 1977.
  5. Rohrlich, Rudy (1984). Women in Search of Utopia: Mavericks and Mythmakers. New York: Schocken. pp. 157–167. ISBN 9780805207620..
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