1991: Women from the House of Representatives charge up the steps of the Senate when they hear that their Senatorial colleagues were refusing to let Anita Hill testify in the Clarence Thomas hearings.[/caption]
Featuring:
- The Fight We Have Left (poetry)
Dorothy Wall - Howling at the Moon (essay)
Diane Perea - Nevertheless, She Persisted (poetry)
Laurie Rosen - On Sea Level Rise Inside and Outside My Head (essay)
Michelle Fernandez - Arizona Magazine Stand (poetry)
Marilee Richards - Transformation: Anaïs Nin (memoir)
Donna Emerson - Refreshment (poem)
Sean Conrey - How the Fourteenth Amendment Shapes America (Part 1) (essay)
Charles Entrekin - Elements (poetry)
Gail Ghai - Flying in Place: Notes of a Taiko Beginner (memoir)
Sarah Juniper Rabkin - Summer Air (poetry)
Grace Grafton - Jerusalem Now (prose)
Alicia Vandevorst - The River Siren (poetry)
Peter Goodwin - Four Waves of Feminism (essay)
Martha Rampton - C’Mon Back Café (poetry)
Eugene Berson - Issue 5.4 Call for Submissions: Inequality

























Teaching us a drum-song phrase by phrase, the sensei seems to intuit just how much novelty we beginners can absorb. She gradually introduces nuances of technique, gently correcting our form when necessary. She challenges us without loading on too many new ideas at a time. She says, “If this is too much to think about right now, then don’t worry about it.”





