Difference between revisions of "Femzine"

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(update history inc. Mari Wolf, clearly launched 1952 #newresearch)
 
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== (1) A [[Fanzine]] by [[Marion Cox]]==
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'''''Femzine''''' was a US [[fanzine]] started by [[Marion Cox]] which specialized in material by women, associated with the [[Fanettes]]. Its history remains somewhat murky, but per ''[[Fancyclopedia 2]]'' it was already in existence (as the group's [[OO]]?) in January 1953, see its [[Fanettes]] entry. ''[[Fan To See]]'' #1 (Jan 1953 but clearly prepared at the end of the previous year) reviewed ''Femzine'' #2 (as a quarterly), so we may conclude that it was founded in 1952. It was then promoted in [[Mari Wolf]]'s "Fandora's Box" (''[[Imagination (prozine)]]'' February 1953<ref> https://archive.org/details/Imagination_v04n02_1953-02_UnkSc-cape1736/page/n147/?q=femzine </ref> and several following)<ref>Specifically May and July issues, which would confirm the quarterly regularity. Sadly Wolf did not specify the issues/dates, but listed some contents: it would seem they slanted toward fiction.</ref> and other prozines, though often as "new".<ref>As summarised, perhaps not quite reliably, in [[Eric Leif Davin]]'s ''[[Partners in Wonder]]: Women and the Birth of Science Fiction, 1926–1965'', 2005, [https://books.google.cz/books?id=ZoNDebTvUnsC&pg=PA91&&q=femzinefalse pages 91–2]</ref>
A [[fanzine]] edited/published by [[Marion Cox]] in the 1950s which specialized in material by women.
 
  
Other [[SF]] [[fans]] who were involved in the [[zine]] were [[Juanita Coulson]], [[Honey Wood]], and [[Noreen Falasca]].
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Other [[femmefan]]s who were involved in the zine were [[Juanita Coulson]], [[Honey Wood]], and [[Noreen Falasca]]. When Cox had publishing problems, the zine was continued for a couple of issues by Coulson and [[Lee Anne Tremper]]. It had folded by May 1956 (or earlier, as mentioned in ''[[Femizine]]'' 8, March 1956: "I hear that the U.S. venture 'FEMZINE' has folded"), whereupon Juanita filled out members’ subscriptions with ''[[Yandro]]'', as announced in its #40.
 
 
== (2) A [[Fanzine]] by [[Juanita Coulson]] and [[Lee Anne Tremper]]. ==
 
Probably published in the late 1950s. In April, 1960, Tremper mentions this as a fanzine that "I have published", i.e. previous to 1960. In her (apparently) chronological list of her previous fanzines, she lists it as coming after one she published in 1954-55, but the last one before her 1960 ''[[Space Cage]]''.
 
  
 
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{Were these two separate fanzines?}
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'''See also:'''
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* ''[[STF-ETTE]]'' (first women-only zine, 1940–1)
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* ''[[Femizine]]'' (more famous British almost-namesake, 1954–6 and 1958–60; sometimes misspelled "Femzine" even in the ''Imagination'')
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* ''[[Pandora]]'' (fanzine launched 1978 with the subtitle "a femzine")
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* pro comics mag ''Femzine'' (Paragon Publications, 1981).
  
{{publication}}
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{{publication|start=1952|end=1956}}
{{multiple}}
 
 
[[Category:fanzine]]
 
[[Category:fanzine]]
 
[[Category:US]]
 
[[Category:US]]
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[[Category:clubzine]]

Latest revision as of 16:24, 3 July 2024

Femzine was a US fanzine started by Marion Cox which specialized in material by women, associated with the Fanettes. Its history remains somewhat murky, but per Fancyclopedia 2 it was already in existence (as the group's OO?) in January 1953, see its Fanettes entry. Fan To See #1 (Jan 1953 but clearly prepared at the end of the previous year) reviewed Femzine #2 (as a quarterly), so we may conclude that it was founded in 1952. It was then promoted in Mari Wolf's "Fandora's Box" (Imagination February 1953[1] and several following)[2] and other prozines, though often as "new".[3]

Other femmefans who were involved in the zine were Juanita Coulson, Honey Wood, and Noreen Falasca. When Cox had publishing problems, the zine was continued for a couple of issues by Coulson and Lee Anne Tremper. It had folded by May 1956 (or earlier, as mentioned in Femizine 8, March 1956: "I hear that the U.S. venture 'FEMZINE' has folded"), whereupon Juanita filled out members’ subscriptions with Yandro, as announced in its #40.

Issue Date Pages Notes
5 26
  1. https://archive.org/details/Imagination_v04n02_1953-02_UnkSc-cape1736/page/n147/?q=femzine
  2. Specifically May and July issues, which would confirm the quarterly regularity. Sadly Wolf did not specify the issues/dates, but listed some contents: it would seem they slanted toward fiction.
  3. As summarised, perhaps not quite reliably, in Eric Leif Davin's Partners in Wonder: Women and the Birth of Science Fiction, 1926–1965, 2005, pages 91–2

See also:

  • STF-ETTE (first women-only zine, 1940–1)
  • Femizine (more famous British almost-namesake, 1954–6 and 1958–60; sometimes misspelled "Femzine" even in the Imagination)
  • Pandora (fanzine launched 1978 with the subtitle "a femzine")
  • pro comics mag Femzine (Paragon Publications, 1981).

Publication 19521956
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