Cotidiano Mujer (Everyday Woman) was a Uruguayan magazine published by the feminist collective of the same name from 1985 to 2013. Its objectives were to discuss human rights and women's rights, and to give visibility to aspects of the daily lives of women.
First issue | September 1985 |
---|---|
Final issue Number | March 2013 63 |
Company | Cotidiano Mujer |
Country | Uruguay |
Language | Spanish |
ISSN | 0797-3950 |
History
editThe magazine Cotidiano Mujer was founded by Lilián Celiberti, Elena Fonseca , and Anna María Colucci at the end of the civic-military dictatorship of Uruguay, when Celiberti was released from prison.[1][2] At that time there was a political and social effervescence linked to the democratic transition which facilitated the public visibility of a second feminist wave that was emerging in the country. This new feminist agenda sought to advance beyond formal civil and political rights, to examine the problems of everyday life, such as the distribution of work and power within families.[3]
In this environment, the magazine's first issue was published in September 1985, financed with an economic contribution by Colucci.[4]
The magazine had five periods, covering the years between 1985 and 2013, with several interruptions. In its 63 issues, Cotidiano Mujer dealt with topics such as labor rights, sexual and reproductive rights, the decriminalization of abortion, the political participation of women, women in sports, sexual diversity (especially lesbianism), motherhood, racism, migration, and secularism.[1]
The legalization of abortion in Uruguay was one of the main objectives of the organization and of the magazine, which began a campaign to this end in 1989.[5][6] Another important focus of the magazine was questioning the image of women in traditional media. In this area, in 1997, with the support of UNICEF, a media monitoring program was carried out that produced more than 25,000 record cards on issues related to women and children.[7]
Team
editCotidiano Mujer's editors were Elvira Lutz, Lilián Abracinskas , Brenda Bogliaccini, Lilián Celiberti, Lucy Garrido , Ivonne Trías , Ana Danielli, and Elena Fonseca. Contributors included Telia Negrão, Cecilia Gordano, Luciana da Luz Silva, Jone Bengoetxea Epelde, Julia Zanetti, María Silvana Sciortino, Cecilia Olea, Virginia Vargas, Betânia Ávila, Ana Cristina González , Rafael Sanseviero, Paul Flores Arroyo, Teresa Lanza Monje, Carmen Silva, Alma Espino, Diana Maffía, Marta López, Marta Lamas, Alicia Miyares, Raquel Olea, Fanny Puyesky, Silvana Pissano, Margarita Percovich, Alejandra Sardá, Roxana Vásquez Sotelo, Ana Güezmes, Line Bareiro, Ana Falú, Verónica Pérez, Flor de María Meza, Constanza Moreira, Valeria España, and Lucía Pérez.
In 2016, the organization made the first issues available under a Creative Commons license, corresponding to its first period, published monthly between September 1985 (No. 1) and November 1989 (No. 33).[8] In 2018, it digitized and made available copies from the second to the fourth periods. Added to issues from of the fifth period, which were already available, it finished digitizing the entire archive of the magazine for free access.
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ a b Fernández, Victoria (22 November 2017). "En un sótano sobre la calle Jackson, unas 'locas feministas' empezaron a escribir sobre el aborto, el sexo y la libertad" [In a Basement on Jackson Street, Some 'Crazy Feminists' Began Writing About Abortion, Sex, and Freedom]. Búsqueda (in Spanish). Archived from the original on 30 March 2019. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
- ^ Suárez Val, Helena (July 2017). Feminismo, podcasting y memoria [Feminism, Podcasting, and Memory] (in Spanish). 4th Latin American and Caribbean Congress of Social Sciences. p. 3. Retrieved 3 September 2022 – via ResearchGate.
- ^ "Devenires del feminismo latino-uruguayo" [Beginnings of Latin-Uruguayan Feminism] (PDF). Contrapunto (in Spanish) (5). University of the Republic: 15. November 2014. ISSN 2301-0282. Archived from the original (PDF) on 31 March 2019. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
- ^ Mizrahi, Ana María (5 March 2018). "Dos feministas frente a frente" [Two Feminists Face to Face]. LaRed21 (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 September 2022.
- ^ Arocena, Felipe; Aguiar, Sebastián (2017). "Tres leyes innovadoras en Uruguay: Aborto, matrimonio homosexual y regulación de la marihuana" [Three innovative laws in Uruguay: abortion, same-sex marriage and marijuana regulation]. Revista de Ciencias Sociales (in Spanish). 30 (40): 43–62. ISSN 1688-4981. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
- ^ Schvarz, Sergio (6 October 2018). "Historia del Feminismo en Uruguay" [History of Feminism in Uruguay]. Crítica.cl (in Spanish). Retrieved 3 September 2022.
- ^ Garrido, Lucy (March 2001). "Medio y medio. Para venderte mejor" [Half and Half, to Sell You Better] (PDF). Comunicar (in Spanish). No. 16. pp. 59–63. ISSN 1134-3478. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
- ^ "Cotidiano Mujer pone a disposición colección de revistas con licencia Creative Commons" [Cotidiano Mujer Makes Available a Collection of Magazines Licensed Under Creative Commons] (in Spanish). Creative Commons Uruguay. 17 June 2016. Retrieved 3 September 2022.
External links
edit- Cotidiano Mujer at the Internet Archive