The University of Melbourne Archives holds some significant collections relating to the Women’s Liberation Movement, or Second Wave Feminism (in general, activism, campaigns and movements for women’s rights from the late 1960s on). These include papers of significant women, unions involved in campaigns around industrial matters and more. Some of these are listed below.
Germaine Greer, author, journalist, broadcaster, feminist and conservationist was born in Melbourne, Australia on January 29, 1939. She was educated at Star of the Sea College, Gardenvale, studied English and French literature and language at the University of Melbourne, (BA Hons) and graduated MA (Hons I) from the University of Sydney with a thesis on Byron's satiric verse, and was a Senior Tutor in English (1963-1964). Greer earned a PhD from the University of Cambridge on Shakespeare's Early Comedies and was appointed Lecturer at the University of Warwick (1967-1972). Greer was one of the first women appointed full members of Cambridge University Footlights Dramatic Club and subsequently played roles in comedies for television, with regular appearances on radio and television continuing throughout her career. A contributor and editor for the underground press Oz and Suck magazines, Greer was also a gardening columnist 'Rose Blight' for Private Eye in the late 1960s and 1970s. Greer has written widely throughout her career for the mainstream press as a journalist, columnist and reviewer.
In 1970 Greer published The Female Eunuch, which explored the limitations on women's lives and selves in the wider context of the liberation movements of that time. It created a shock wave of recognition in women around the world, became an international bestseller and a landmark in the history of the women's movement and was reprinted and widely translated. This launched Greer's career as an author and was followed by a series of popular and academic books including: The Obstacle Race: The Fortunes of Women Painters and their Work 1979 , Sex and Destiny: The Politics of Human Fertility 1984, Shakespeare 1986, The Madwoman's Underclothes selected journalism 1964-1985 1986, Kissing the Rod: An Anthology of Seventeenth Century Women's Verse (coedited with Susan Hastings, Jeslyn Medoff and Melinda Sansone) 1988, Daddy we hardly knew you 1989, The Uncollected Verse of Aphra Behn (Ed.) 1989, The Change: Women Ageing and the Menopause 1991, The Collected Works of Katherine Philips: The Matchless Orinda (vol. III The Translations) with Dr Ruth Little 1993, Slip-Shod Sibyls: Recognition Rejection and the Women Poet 1995, The Surviving Works of Anne Wharton (edited with Susan Hastings) 1997, The Whole Woman 1999, John Wilmot Earl of Rochester 1999, 101 Poems by 101 Women (ed.) 2001, The Boy (2003), Poems for Gardeners (ed.) 2003, Whitefella Jump Up: The Shortest Way to Nationhood (Quarterly Essay) 2003-2004, Shakespeare's Wife 2007, On Rage 2008, and White Beech 2013. Greer is in addition the publisher of several volumes of seventeenth century women's writing under the imprint Stump Cross Books.
Greer taught at the Universities of Tulsa (1979-1983) and Warwick (c. 1989-2003). She is the president of the invertebrate charity Buglife and the founder of Friends of Gondwana Rainforest charity which manages the Cave Creek Rainforest Rehabilitation Scheme in Southern Queensland. In 2013 Greer sold her archive to the University of Melbourne, with proceeds to benefit Friends of Gondwana. Greer is the recipient of numerous scholarships, honours and awards.
Source: Who's Who in Australia.
For information about the collection, see the Germaine Greer Archive
The Communist Party of Australia formed in 1920. During the 1930s Depression its membership increased as people sought alternatives to industrial capitalism. It reached the peak of its influence post WWII, when its membership was at its largest, and a number of its members held key trade union positions. Several prominent academics have also featured amongst its members. In 1949 the Menzies government conducted a Royal Commission into the CPA, and in 1950 a national referendum to outlaw the CPA was defeated. In 1963 it split over the Sino- Soviet issue, and a splinter CPA (Marxist-Leninist) was formed. In 1970 and 1984 there were other ideological splits, all of which weakened the Party and it disbanded in 1989-1991.
1990.0014 | Communist Party Of Australia. Victorian State Committee | 1934-1989 | 299 individual posters (0.16m) | 299 posters covering local and international left-wing concerns and activities. They include posters both produced and collected by the CPA. The posters originate from both Australia (mainly Melbourne and Sydney), and overseas. The date range of the posters is Australian 1967-1987; overseas 1934-1989. | Yes listed ONLINE | Access: Open |
1976.0028 | Communist Party Of Australia. Victorian State Committee | 1930-1975 | 15 archive boxes, 2 flat boxes | Subject files regarding Dissolution Bill, elections, May Day, industrial work, industrial relations; the 1949 Royal Commission into Communism; factory bulletins; pamphlets; posters; campaign material; photographs. | Yes listed ONLINE | Access: Restricted |
1991.0152 | Communist Party Of Australia. Victorian State Committee | 1900-1989 | The material in this collection was transferred from the Communist Party of Australia Victorian Office when it closed in 1991. The collection included three broad sections of material. First, a wide range of information material and administrative files; Victorian State Committee Conference minutes; CPA Women's Collective minutes, correspondence and subject files; History Collective files; Marx School material; Education Collective and National Schools; Head Office Subject files; publications and correspondence from contemporary social movements and campaigns such as women's liberation, CICD, PND and gay liberation. Second, boxes of socialist and communist pamphlets and publications from 1900 on arranged by subject. Third, a large photograph collection. | Yes listed ONLINE | Access: Restricted | |
1995.0107 | Communist Party Of Australia. Victorian State Committee | 1970-1988 | 13 Units, 240 audio tapes | This acquisition consists of: Minutes of Victorian State Committee, c.1970s-1980s; Audio tapes of CPA members, 1970s-1980s; Filmed interview with Ralph Gibson; State conferences; newsletters from Victoria and interstate branches; New Left Party minutes, conference documents and circulars; subject files; graphics and cartoons; educational material; National Committee papers and correspondence; Ralph Gibson's manuscript speeches; Tribune newspaper and social events; Marx Summer School. | Yes listed ONLINE | Access: Restricted |
The Lilith Collective grew from a fourth year undergraduate seminar 'Women and the Family in American and Australian Society 1788- 1980' conducted in the History Department of the University of Melbourne in 1983. With encouragement from the Department the seminar papers were published as 'Lilith: a Women's History Journal' No.1, Winter 1984. By 1985 the Collective affirmed its committment to feminist informed history and changed the Journal's name accordingly. The Collective has funded the Journal and gathered articles by organising feminist history conferences. Membership of the Collective has passed between post- graduate feminist history students at the major Melbourne Universities.
1997.0056 | Lilith Collective | 1984-1997 | 72 cms | Lilith, No.1, 1984 - No.8, Summer, 1993; Correspondence with contributors; organisers' working papers for conferences; conference flyers; minutes of collective meetings; financial records. Seven audio tapes of the Feminist History Conference, 28 May 1988 organised by the Lilith Collective. | Not applicable | Access: Open |
Sugar & Snails Press began life as the Women's Movement Childrens' Literature Co-operative Ltd in 1974. It was started by a group of women from the Box Hill Women's Liberation Branch who were concerned about sexism in children's literature, and began to publish and write their own books. The company was closed in 1991 as its members believed that mainstream publishers had accepted the need for non-sexist literature.
1991.0132 | Sugar & Snails Press Co-Operative Ltd | 1974-1991 | 35 boxes, 1 volume, OS material | 35 archives boxes, 1 volume. Company papers 1974-1991. It is strongest in the early 1980s when the Collective acquired an administrative staff and office. It also includes copies of all children's publications and some artwork. | Not listed | Access: Open |
Sisters Publishing was established in 1979 by five women publishers: Diana Gribble, Hilary McPhee, Sally Milner, Anne O'Donovan and Joyce Nicholson. It was a feminist company whose purpose was to publish fiction, non-fiction and poetry by and for women. To limit the problems of distribution, they also ran a mail-order organisation, Sisters Bookclub, which provided its members with a quarterly newsletter and books by female authors as well as its own publications at discount prices. The company had considerable success; they published eleven titles, including first works by Beverley Farmer and Jean Bedford, and bookclub membership reached 3000 subscribers from all parts of Australia. However its policy of offering discounted books meant that the company had little long-term viability and in 1984 it ceased operation.
1999.0016 | Sisters Publishing Ltd | 1978-1987 | 2.1 m (13 archive boxes) | Correspondence, minutes of directors' meetings, manuscripts, invoices, orders, subscriber lists, newsletters ("Sisters News"). | Yes listed ONLINE | Access: Open |
The Melbourne University Union was established in 1884 on the instigation of John Monash. Its objectives were to promote the common interests of students, provide means for practice in writing and speaking and to provide a meeting place for all members of the University, including, to a lesser extent, staff and graduates. After years of makeshift accomodation, a Union House was achieved chiefly through the efforts of Raymond Priestley, Vice-Chancellor in 1937. By the 1950s the Union was no longer meeting the needs of its three user groups. In 1952 staff retreated to their own club, University House, and the Graduate Union was constituted as a separate entity and eventually set up Graduate House in Leicester Street in 1962. The Union became a centre for student life and activity only. By 1965 the Union building had become inadequate and most of the remnants of the old Museum building were demolished to allow for expansion.
In Melbourne, the Women’s Liberation Movement (WLM) was closely connected to trade unions and the workers’ movement. By the early 1970s a Women’s Liberation Group had become affiliated with the Student Union at the University of Melbourne. Just as universities provided a haven for anti-war and radical ideas, they proved favourable for the ideas and activism of the women’s movement. Indeed, the women’s movement grew when women active in trade unions, the Communist Party, anti-conscription and anti-war movements perceived that the talk of a new society mostly included the old sexism.3
At the University of Melbourne, the University Assembly formed a Women’s Working Group, which first reported on the status of women at the university in 1975; this report was instrumental in forcing the university to adopt equal opportunity policies. In the Student Union, members of the Women’s Liberation Group organised on campus and participated in wider demonstrations reported in Farrago.
1982.0033 | Melbourne University Student Union | 1923-1971 | 1 metre (11 volumes) | Melbourne University Student Union Minutes 1923-1971. |
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Access: Restricted | |
2000.0095 | Melbourne University Student Union | 1964-1971 | 6 cm. | UM69. Union Board Minute Book, 1964-1971 | Not applicable | Access: Restricted | |
1979.0047 | Melbourne University Student Union | 1965-1979 | 72 cm (6 archive boxes) | Minutes, files re clubs and societies, theatre and other activities 1965-1979. | Yes box level list ONLINE | Access: Restricted | |
1986.0046 | Melbourne University Student Union | 1967-1985 | 2 metres | Union Council notices and constitution 1967-68, minutes of meetings 10 Nov 1974 - 20 Oct 1976, 7 Dec 1976 - 4 Dec 1979, 11 Feb - 3 Oct 1980 and Activities Committee 14 Jan 1980 - 5 Aug 1981. Activities Office - 5 Aug 1981 - 24 Nov 1982. Clubs and Societies - 10 Sept 1975 - Dec 1981. Activities sheets 1969-1973. Folder - Union Council Election Rules, n.d., 1967; Constitution n.d., Clubs and Societies regulations. Routine Grants Book Jan 1972 - May 1976. Video- tape | Not listed | Access: Restricted | |
1991.0015 | Melbourne University Student Union | 1984-1988 | 25 archives boxes | Subject files; minutes; correspondence; working files; publications | Not listed | Access: Restricted |
This material represents records and other memorabilia coll- ected by Jeannie while she was a student at the University of Melb- ourne from 1979 to 1983. JZ was active in the S.R.C., the A.U.S. and the A.L.P. Club, and also active generally in leftist and feminist student politics.
1989.0047 | Zakharov, Jeannie | 1970-1982 | 2 archive boxes, posters | AUS and SRC badges 1981 to 1982; Anti-draft and peace headbands c 1970-1971; Banner - Victoria's 150th anniversary; Copies of "Women Arise" c 1970 to 1972; Combat Sexism school kit, 1975 to 1976; MU ALP Club 1979 to 1982; MU SRC 1981 to 1982 (includes SRC Sexuality Festival 1982); AUS 1981 to 1982, research papers, badges, balloons and stickers for SRC Sexuality Festival 1982; 38 posters re: disarmament, feminism, MU SRC, MU ALP Club | Not listed | Access: Open |
Beside these collections, UMA holds the Victorian Women’s Liberation and Lesbian Feminist Archives (VWLLFA). The VWLLFA dates from 1982 when a women's liberation reading group was formed. When the members realised that some of the papers, publications and memorabilia of the Women's Liberation Movement were already either hard to come by or destroyed, the group reformed as the Women's Liberation Archives (WLA) with the aim of preserving as much of the material of the Women's Liberation Movement in Victoria as possible and to make it available for research and other purposes.
The WLA had its first meeting on 1 March 1983 and met regularly for the next ten years. During that time it published three calendars (1984, 1985 and 1987) in conjunction with Sybilla Press; moved location several times; successfully applied for funding from the Victorian Women's Trust; and continued collecting, preserving and making material available for research.
In 1992 the Women's Liberation Building in 28 Gertrude Street Fitzroy, where the Archive was housed, closed. The Archive was relocated to a private home and renamed the Women's Liberation and Lesbian Archives. In 2000, a new collective was formed to find a permanent home for the Archive, and it incorporated as the Victorian Women's Liberation and Lesbian Feminist Archives Inc. Funding from the Community Heritage Grants Scheme in Canberra paid for an overall assessment of the collection and, after looking at the options, a decision was made to move it to the University of Melbourne Archives (UMA) at the end of that year.
The VWLLFA Collective continues to be active in support of its initial aims. The Collective maintains its own web site at www.vwllfa.org.au and Collective volunteers have worked with UMA staff to list, preserve and make the collection accessible for public use and research.
There are over 150 VWLLFA collections held in the UMA and accessible through its Cultural Collections Reading Room. In line with standard archival principles, the collection is organised and list under the name of the creator (the woman or organisation who collected the records in her particular collection). Unfortunately, this can make navigation of the collection a little more difficult, particularly if one is searching for a specific journal or subject. The best way is to search the online UMA catalogue and failing that, to contact the reference service at archives@archives.unimelb.edu.au.
A list of all of the publications held in the VWLLFA is also listed in the following tab.
UMA Reference No | Collection Title | UMA Reference No | Collection Title | UMA Reference No | Collection Title |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
2000.0108 | Bon Hull | 2000.0226 | Renee Romeril | 2000.0268 | Joan Goodwin |
2000.0204 | Jo Phillips | 2000.0151 | Robyn Martin | 2003.0144 | Lesbian Festival 1992 |
2000.0208 | Margaret Jacobs | 2000.0162, 2005.0079 | Judith Power | 2000.0269 | Lesbian Line |
2000.0205 | Cathleen Moore | 2000.0262 | Suzi Grezik | 2000.0270 | Daylesford Women’s Resource Centre |
2000.0207 | Judy Powers and Judy Willers | 2000.0203 | Carole Grey | 2000.0271 | Kit Butler |
2000.0199 | Sue Jackson | 2000.0263 | Sue Stanton Brypher | 2000.0272, 2011.0001 | Union of Australian Women |
2000.0113 | Victorian Women’s Liberation and Lesbian Feminist Archives | 2000.0264 | Colleen Pearce | 2000.0161 | Aboriginal Reconciliation Study Circle for Lesbians |
2000.0109 | Di Otto | 2000.0227 | Helen Rea | 2000.0273 | Chris Momot |
2000.0209 | Karina Veal | 2000.0239 | Gil Electo | 2000.0283 | Lesbiana |
2000.0154 | Kathy Gill | 2000.0250 | Roxy B Wilde | 2000.0275 | Sabine Gleditsch |
2000.0164 | Vig Geddes | 2000.0229 | Ariel Couchman | 2002.0061, 2006.0110, 2011.0081 | Matrix Guild |
2000.0210 | Jan Chapman Davis | 2000.0230 | Women’s Legal Resource Group | 2000.0258 | Kay McVey |
2000.0211 | Frances Ryan | 2000.0168 | Katrina Phipps | 2006.0109 | Jewish Lesbian Group of Victoria |
2000.0155 | Australian Union of Students Women’s Department | 2000.0251 | Di Christensen | 2003.0142 | Lesbians Unlimited |
2000.0156 | Women’s Studies Centre | 2000.0231, 2006.0122 | Zelda D’Aprano | 2000.0277 | Amazon Theatre |
2000.0241 | Rigmor Berg | 2000.0169 | Marie Rowan | Dwayne Campbell | |
2000.0163 | Women’s Liberation Switchboard | 2000.0165 | Elke Efkemann | 2000.0278 | Non-Government Organisation Forum on Women Beijing 1995 |
2010.0011 | Victorian Women’s Liberation and Lesbian Feminist Archives | 2000.0166, 2005.0097 | Laurie Bebbington | 2000.0171, 2011.0030 | Performing Older Women’s Circus |
2000.0212 | Ruth Berman | 2000.0177 | Women for Survival | 2000.0279 | Women’s Movement Register |
2000.0213 | Hinerangi Ferrall-Heath | 2000.0232 | Pheobe Thorndyke and Rosemary Livingstone | 2000.0280 | Evelyn Robson |
2000.0176 | Glenda Ballantyne | 2000.0198 | Lesbian Conference and Festival 1990 | Anon | |
2000.0259, 2010.0002 | Jan Testro / Gladys | 2000.0233 | Office of the Status of Women | 2002.0053 | Sara Elkas |
2000.0214 | Jenny Tatchell | 2000.0172 | Women’s Social and Political Coalition | 2000.0299, 2011.0027, 2012.0283 | Maureen O’Connor |
2000.0243 | Di Fruin | 2000.0170 | Socialist Feminist Conference 1984 | 2000.0153, 2000.0197 | Women’s Liberation Newsletter Collective |
2000.0215 | Sally Mendes and Alva Geikie | 2000.0240 | Janice Spears | 2000.0282 | Thelma Solomon |
2000.0157, 2000.0283 | Pat Longmore | 2000.0196 | Women’s Building Council | 2000.0283 | Sheril Berkovitch |
2000.0244 | Pam Aitkins | 2000.0167 | Jean Ferguson | 2003.0143 | International Lesbian Day |
2000.0216 | Alison Tilson | 2000.0235, 2008.0001 | Wendy Suiter | 2012.0007 | Journal of Australian Lesbian Feminist Studies |
2000.0158 | Community Research Action Centre | 2000.0236 | Anne Stafford and Netti Davidson | 2006.0111 | Orange Action |
2000.0245 | Jane Selby | 2000.0283 | Janet Campbell | Rosalinda Rayne | |
2000.0016 | Rivka Pile | 2000.0252 | Alice Petherbridge | 2002.0052 | 6th International Feminist Book Fair |
2000.0218 | Eileen Capocchi | 2000.0253 | Fairfield Falcons | 2004.0050 | Amazon Games |
2000.0219 | Tess Moloney | 2000.0149 | Sarah Yeomans | 2004.0051 | Tania Lienert |
2000.0110 | Susan Hawthorne | 2000.0254 | Labrys | 2000.0283 | Jude Dennis |
2000.0220 | Vashti Collective | 2000.0206 | Marjorie Oke | 2011.0004 | Vera Ray |
2000.0221 | Women Against Rape | 2000.0200 | Karen Bird | 2005.0092 | Salon A Muse |
2000.0222 | Women’s Abortion Action Campaign | 2000.0237 | Sabin Fernbacher | 2005.0081 | Rhonda Galbally |
2000.0300 | Women and Children in Transition (WACKIT) | 2000.0173 | Pat Rooney | 2006.0067 | JP Goodchild |
2000.0160 | ROUGE | Scarlet Woman | 2007.0036 | Chris Sitka | |
2000.0223 | Lesbian Open House | 2000.0255 | Women’s Information Referral Exchange (WIRE) | 2007.0066 | Heather Chapple |
2000.0224 | Matilda Women’s Refuge | 2000.0147 | Council of Action for Equal Pay | 2011.0025 | Sylvia Kinder |
2000.0202 | Lesbian Newsletter Collective | 2000.0152 | Women’s Resource and Research Centre | 2011.0026 | Ursula Dutkiewicz |
2000.0261 | Lesbian Action Group | 2000.0238 | Ten/Forty Conferences | 2011.0007 | Barbara Williams |
2000.0247 | Sally Mendes | 2000.0256 | Lesbian Festival 1991 | 2011.0009, 2011.0045 | Carole Ann |
2000.0174 | Women’s Liberation Centre | Allyson Norton-Willson | 2011.0008 | Ardella Tibby | |
2000.0248 | Victorian Women’s Refuge Group | 2000.0265 | Noel Ridgeway | 2011.0010 | Mary Owen |
2000.0159 | Feminist Publications Fund | 2000.0266, 2011.0006, 2011.0032 | Jean Taylor | 2011.0002 | Helen Robertson |
2000.0225 | Alison Thorne | 2000.0298 | Women’s Liberation Halfway House | Lesbian Network | |
2000.0150 | Barbara Friday | 2000.0267 | Lesbian and Women’s Community Theatre | 2012.0002 | Ulla Svensson |
2000.0249 | Katherine Rechtman | 2000.0234 | Women’s Refuge Referral Service |
Abortion Law Reform Association Newsletter |
Abortion law Repeal |
Action |
Ain’t I A Woman |
Alive and WEL |
Animal Rights |
Anti Prison News Journal |
Australian Feminist Newspaper |
Banshee |
Bay Area Reporter |
Behind Closed Doors |
Berkely Barb |
Between the Eyes |
Big Mama Bitches |
Black Women’s Forum |
Bluestocking |
Body Politic |
Bread and Wine |
Broadsheet |
Camp |
Campaign |
Catalyst |
Cauldron |
Chain Reaction |
Circle |
Connection |
Consultative Committee of Women on Leisure and Recreation Newsletter |
Courage |
Current Sweden |
Deneuve |
Dykespeak |
Emma |
Empire News |
Equal Opportunity News |
Everywoman |
Fallopian Tube |
Farrago |
FARTS |
Feminist and Gay News |
Feminist Therapists Newsletter |
Fibreforum |
Film News |
Fin |
Freedom to Choose |
Fury |
Gay Community News |
Gay Liberation Newsletter |
Gay Rays |
Gay Teachers and Students Group Newsletter |
Gayzette |
Girls Own |
Grapevine |
Greg Weir Defence |
Health Sharing Women Newsletter of the Victorian Women’s Health Information Service |
Hecate |
High Spirited Women Unite |
Ink |
Interface Review |
International Women’s Development Agency News |
Iris |
ISIS |
Join Hands |
Judy’s Punch |
Koorier |
Learning Exchange |
Lesbian Connection |
Lesbian Feminist Magazine |
Lesbian Network |
Lesbian News |
Lesbiana |
Liberation |
Lilith |
Lip |
Lots Wife |
Mabel |
Mama |
Manipulation |
Manushi |
MeJane |
Melbourne Observer Magazine |
Melbourne University Women’s Liberation Newsletter |
Message Stick |
Monthly Cycle |
Mothers for Peace Newsletter |
Ms |
Ms Muffet |
National Council of Women of Victoria Newsletter |
National Review |
National Student |
National U |
New Dawn |
Newssheet: Off Our Backs |
Office of Women’s Affairs |
Other Side |
Other Woman |
Our Women |
Out From Under |
Out Now |
Outrage |
Pacific Peacemaker |
Panacea |
Praxis |
Pursuit |
Rabelais |
Radical America |
Rag |
Red Rag |
Refractory Girl |
Response |
Rib |
Right to Choose |
Rouge |
Rough Times |
Sage the Separatists Age |
San Francisco Bay Times |
Scarlet Woman |
Second Wave SHE |
Shrew |
Sibyl |
Sister |
Socialist Feminist Magazine |
Socialist Worker |
Spare Rib |
Speaking Volumes |
Star |
Survival News |
Sydney Feminist Newspaper |
Sydney Women’s Liberation Newsletter |
Teachers Newsletter |
Textile |
The Bulletin |
The Digger |
The Feminist Renaissance |
The Journalists’ Clarion |
The Kite |
The Little Red School Book |
The Suffragette |
Time |
Tribune |
Trouble and Strife |
Unemployment News |
Union of Australian Women Newsletter |
Union of Australian Women Newsletter |
Unity |
Vashti |
Vashti’s Voice |
Victorian Action on Intellectual Disability |
WAC Women’s Newsletter |
Witches & Dykes |
WLM Newsheet |
Womanspeak |
Women and Revolution |
Women at Work |
Women: A Journal of Liberation |
Women’s Abortion Action Campaign Melbourne Newsletter |
Women’s Action for Nuclear Disarmament Newsletter |
Women’s Department News |
Women’s Ecology Action Group Newsletter |
Women’s International Bulletin |
Women’s Liberation Election News |
Women’s Liberation Newsletter |
Women’s National Us |
Women’s News Service |
Women’s Newsletter |
Women’s Refuges Magazine |
Women’s Rights Newsletter |
Women’s Support Groups |
Women’s Tribune |
Women’s Weekly |
Wrist |