Ms. Magazine was a feminist magazine that told the real lives of women and events during the women's rights movement. Ms. played an important role in the movement due to the fact that it was one of the only mainstream media forms to tell these narratives and be run by all women. Ms. Magazine had its ups and downs, the downs mostly when it first opened, and the ups when it became very successful and made people realize the truth about society. However through it all the magazine continued to share harrowing truths and to support women and the movement.
Ms. Magazine was opened as a “one shot” in The New York Magazine in 1971. At the time a meager amount of people thought that it would succeed. It is now one of the most important …show more content…
The article speaks about the women’s right’s movement and the different moving parts of it. The next year Steinem received the 1970 Penney-Missouri Journalism Award for the article.
The first issue of Ms. sold out in eight days and by 1978 it had over 200,000 in subscription rates.
Naming the magazine Ms. Magazine is a poke to society saying that you don’t need to be married to have power. Ms. is seen as a young and naive label, so naming a magazine about feminist ideas a label that is seen as that would be controversial.
The magazine wrote about “repealing laws that criminalized abortion”, it also had a “no comment” column that had discussions about “environmental feminism” , women’s work styles, and the “politics of emerging technologies”. The magazine protested pornography, and wanted a study of date rape. Ms. was the first magazine to feature women demanding things rather than showing them off.
The 300,000 test “one shot” copies of Ms. sold out in eight days It had 20,000 reader letters and 26,000 subscription orders in the early …show more content…
in the early days. Women did not run magazines, they were not seen as capable of power and they were not seen as equal.
Ms. was like a clear voice for women. It was unrefined and it could not get twisted by the media without knowing the real truth since it was written proof of the stories and opinions of the women at the time.
It wasn’t the backbone of the movement, because the movement did not rely on it, however it greatly helped because the media would not show or mention the movement, but Ms. was so popular so it got the real message out there that women deserve rights.
“On March 18, 1970, about a hundred women stormed into the male editor’s office of Ladies’ Home Journal and staged a sit-in for eleven hours, demanding that the magazine hire a female editor-in-chief.” wrote Abigail Pogrebin, “It was a watershed moment. It showed us, the activists in the women’s movement, that we did, indeed, have a movement.” told Vivian Gornick to New York