Other Magazine: Difference between revisions

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Other magazine is for people who defy categories. We print everything from genre-busting fiction, journalism, and essays, to cartoons, artwork, and innovative graphic design. Every four months, our writers bring you challenging ideas, wild tales, rebel futurism, global media, pop criticism, and indie idealism.


SF stories or articles relevant to feminist sf in the magazine:


"Clones Have Human Rights" by [[Annalee Newitz]]. "Human cloning is just another method of reproduction." Issue 11, Dec. 2006.
From the magazine's description:


"Women's Work" by [[Rebecca Ryder Neipris]]. "Women tout primatology as a feminist science."  Issue 10, Monkeys!, March 2006.
>Other magazine is for people who defy categories. We print everything from genre-busting fiction, journalism, and >essays, to cartoons, artwork, and innovative graphic design. Every four months, our writers bring you challenging >ideas, wild tales, rebel futurism, global media, pop criticism, and indie idealism.
 
SF stories or articles relevant to feminist sf in Other magazine:
 
"[[Clones]] Have Human Rights" by [[Annalee Newitz]]. "Human cloning is just another method of reproduction." Issue 11, Dec. 2006.
 
"Women's Work" by [[Rebecca Ryder Neipris]]. "Women tout [[primatology]] as a feminist science."  Issue 10, [[Monkeys]]!, March 2006.


"What's So Bad About Evil? Interview with [[Jacqueline Carey]]." [[Charlie Anders]]. "From Tolkein onward, epic fantasy has embraced dualism as a central tenet."  Issue 9, March 2006.
"What's So Bad About Evil? Interview with [[Jacqueline Carey]]." [[Charlie Anders]]. "From Tolkein onward, epic fantasy has embraced dualism as a central tenet."  Issue 9, March 2006.


"The Future: A to Z" by [[Lori Selke]]. "Does the android have a soul?"
"The Future: A to Z" by [[Lori Selke]]. "Does the [[android]] have a soul?"


"Test Tube Lovers" by Annalee Newitz. "Like all good romances, it serves as both a seduction and a warning."
"Test Tube Lovers" by Annalee Newitz. "Like all good romances, it serves as both a seduction and a warning."

Revision as of 08:10, 31 May 2007


From the magazine's description:

>Other magazine is for people who defy categories. We print everything from genre-busting fiction, journalism, and >essays, to cartoons, artwork, and innovative graphic design. Every four months, our writers bring you challenging >ideas, wild tales, rebel futurism, global media, pop criticism, and indie idealism.

SF stories or articles relevant to feminist sf in Other magazine:

"Clones Have Human Rights" by Annalee Newitz. "Human cloning is just another method of reproduction." Issue 11, Dec. 2006.

"Women's Work" by Rebecca Ryder Neipris. "Women tout primatology as a feminist science." Issue 10, Monkeys!, March 2006.

"What's So Bad About Evil? Interview with Jacqueline Carey." Charlie Anders. "From Tolkein onward, epic fantasy has embraced dualism as a central tenet." Issue 9, March 2006.

"The Future: A to Z" by Lori Selke. "Does the android have a soul?"

"Test Tube Lovers" by Annalee Newitz. "Like all good romances, it serves as both a seduction and a warning."

"Top 10 21st. Century Eugenics Programs" by Claire Light. "Today's eugenics programs are clean, packaged, and visible by their invisibility." "Screw" by John Shirley. "We were all part of selling our world out to these soulless things." "Women Remake The World: A Timeline of Feminist Utopias" by Liz Henry. "Feminist utopia is also revolution." Issue 6, Utopia/Dystopia, February 2005

"Brain Damage" by Annalee Newitz. "At its core, neuroscience fiction is about what happens to our brains when they are colonized by wankers." Issue 5, October 2004.

"The Powderhole" by Michelle Tea. "On very bad days, Candon will talk about digging herself back into the landfill, but mostly she just turns quiet and chews the walls." Cyberpunk urban fantasy zombies. Issue 5, October 2004.


http://othermag.org/blog/