autostraddle.com tumblr presence

1.5M ratings
277k ratings

See, that’s what the app is perfect for.

Sounds perfect Wahhhh, I don’t wanna
lunalunamagazine

8 Women-Run Magazines We Read Everyday (& So Should You)

lunalunamagazine

image

BY LISA MARIE BASILE


There are literally countless gorgeous, intelligent and necessary blogs/mags/collectives out there, and we hope to one day discover, read and feature all of them, but lo & behold, time is not on our side. 

So for now, we present some of our favorite magazines out there, each run, edited or funded by women. 

To get a sense of each magazine, we offer up a representative article and a personal note on why we’re into them. But even that can’t do them justice. Please do check out these sites. You will wake up a better human being for it.

Oh, and if you have suggestions for other magazines we should feature, please leave them in the comments!

The Establishment: We’re a multimedia company run and funded by women that’s predicated on a simple, yet radical notion: the world is a better, more interesting place when everyone has a voice.
The Inevitability of Creative Jealousy

Note: The editors over at The Establishment are unapologetic, brave and consistently devoted to progressive voices. They’re exemplary at publishing high-quality work rather than clickbait, which is always refreshing. Also, they’re funny. We here haven’t quite nailed that yet. 

Brown Girl Magazine: Founded in 2008, Brown Girl Magazine, LLC is an online publication tailored and targeted to young South Asian women living in the diaspora.
What Happens When You Write About Dating in a Culture Where Relationships are Taboo

Note: This magazine is dedicated to their demographic by always publishing really smart + service-oriented content that pushes boundaries and inspires readers. Also, I worked with Kamini, their managing editor, once upon a time. Kamini is veritably amazing.

Witch Craft Mag: Founded in 2015, Witch Craft is a print magazine and micropress with the goal of publishing work that moves us to believe in magic again.

Card of the Week: The King of Pentacles

Note: The coolest thing about this magazine, aside from its wonderful editor Elle, is that it really does create a sense of peace, creativity, magic and dedication to aesthetic. The tarot articles, poetry and overall vibe is a dream. It’s a safe little place on the internet that makes life better.

The Slutist: Slutist is a sex positive feminist collective that was founded by Kristen Korvette in 2013. Slutist aims to uncover and undress the intersections between sex, gender, sexuality and feminism in art, entertainment, and politics while breaking down binaries of style/substance, brains/beauty, masculine/feminine, and virgin/whore. 
Great Moments in Historical Sluttery: Messalina, Excess and Disgrace in Imperial Rome

Note: Luna Luna’s staff attended the Slutist Legacy of the Witch party in Brooklyn last year and we can tell you: these ladies are badass, radical and smart as hell. We read their brilliance on the regular. 

For Harriet: For Harriet is an online community for women of African ancestry. We encourage women, through storytelling and journalism, to engage in candid, revelatory dialogue about the beauty and complexity of Black womanhood. We aspire to educate, inspire, and entertain. 
Dr. Linda Chavers on #BlackGirlMagic and the Article that Started a Firestorm

Note: This is such an important publication. Its content is always of the highest quality, really pushing readers to think – they also have a badass fashion sister site, Coloures, which is really cool (they really make fashion+beauty work well). All the content has a thread of power, opinion, race, society and gender. So smart. 

WEIRD SISTER: WEIRD SISTER explores the intersections of feminism, literature and pop culture. We feature essays, interviews, comics, reviews, playlists, secret diaries, and love letters written in invisible ink. 
Three Pieces of Feminist Advice From Jackie “Moms” Mabley

Note: We love the pop culture aspect of this site. It’s always on-point. But the most rewarding thing about WEIRD SISTER is the rotation of voices: its diverse, always sincere and really fun to read. 

Smarty Mommies: Smarty Mommies is a website dedicated to intelligently discussing the experience of being a smart, thinking mother.
There’s Hope: Clothes for Girls

Note: Our staff isn’t made up of moms over here, but we sure do appreciate reading Smarty Mommies because it is a progressive blog for mothers who want to shatter stereotypes and gender roles – something plenty of other parenting sites are ignoring. Not to mention, a few of our own writers/former staff work over there, and it’s nice to watch them bring the badassery to others.

Autostraddle: Autostraddle is an intelligent, hilarious & provocative voice and a progressively feminist online community for a new generation of kickass lesbian, bisexual & otherwise inclined ladies (and their friends).
Rebel Girls: 9 Queer, Feminist, and/or Gender Theorists (Who Aren’t Judith Butler)

Note: Autostraddle is just the best site. Honestly, if you’re ever looking to read progressive voices or you need to be reminded that humanity has a soul, this is the site for you. Every article is smart and fun and cool, like this one about Dana Scully, everyone’s favorite investigator. 

autostraddle

THANK YOU!!!

dilemonade
Anyway, in a world where these five teenage girls in Rosewood, PA were abused and stalked and preyed upon and framed and trapped and beaten down and tortured and manipulated and made to question their own sanity and goodness, and yet pushed through that to pursue their dreams, and took responsibility for what they got wrong and accepted the repercussions of their mistakes and are working to make their clumsy decisions right, in that world, one single tragic thing happened to Ezra Fitz and he has decided to throw the biggest motherfucking hissy fit you have ever seen in your life.
fatqueerbabee
alemdoafeto

“Na escola foi tranquilo, já na sétima série eu ficava com meninas, e a galera achava super legal, era uma coisa muito nova.

Hoje em dia as pessoas comentam na rua, gritam, chamam de sapatão. Aí eu penso: uau, obrigada por me avisar pessoa, eu não sabia.

Na verdade sofro muito mais preconceito por ser negra do que por ser lésbica. Entro nas lojas com minha irmã branca e as pessoas acham que vou roubar. As pessoas me olham muito feio porque eu sou negra, mas não por ser careca ou por estar com outra menina. Eu nasci assim, não posso mudar isso, nasci negra vou morrer negra, é minha condição. As pessoas ficam mais assustadas de pensar “nossa, essa menina negra tá com a menina branca” do que de pensar “nossa, duas meninas juntas”.

Bruna, 21 anos.

afro-aesthetics

This is really sweet