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The Ms. Makeover
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To call Ms. a Media
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Event sounds less invidious than obvious. Isn't that what all journalism is, by
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definition, and what even serious activism aspires to nowadays? Most
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single-issue magazines can only dream about the eye-catching niche that Gloria
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Steinem and her fellow editors carved out for America's first glossy feminist
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publication 25 years ago. With the glamorous Steinem at its helm--and
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intermittently on its cover-- Ms. was just the promotional vehicle the
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feminist movement needed to go mainstream.
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But
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Inside Ms. , as you might expect of an "authorized" account of the
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magazine, prefers to think of it as a Historic Event. Mary Thom is herself a
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staff veteran, who arrived as a researcher at the very start and went on to
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serve as executive editor under Editor in Chief Robin Morgan in the 1990s. Thom
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touts her reliance on "oral histories of many founders and long-time staff
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members." It is clear that she aspires to a down-in-the-trenches record of a
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pioneering endeavor that, in her opinion, transcended the ordinary boundaries
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of journalism. As such, Thom requires unconventional characters, daunting
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circumstances, and heroic goals, all of which she does her best to supply.
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Hence Gloria Steinem, one among a large cast of
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path-breakers struggling to fulfill an unorthodox dream. Hence the many pages
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devoted to the uphill battles on the business end. Unsurprisingly, bold
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determination prevailed, and a new kind of magazine was born. "Ms. seems
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more like a social movement than a national magazine," Thom writes. The offices
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were both "a publishing enterprise and a center for activism." Ms.
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"represent[ed] a state of mind." Ms. was a "feminist mecca." A flood of
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visitors were eagerly greeted--and vetted--as potential recruits to the cause.
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Funds flowed out from the coffers of the Ms. Foundation for Women,
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giving fledgling feminist projects the boost they needed.
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Such an
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epic saga of political activism may have been what Thom meant to write, but
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soon enough she settles down into the blander form of the press release. Hers
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is not the book to read for a serious assessment of the ideas in the many
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articles she makes sure to mention by author. (Her former colleagues, she is
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well aware, will head straight for the index.) She rehearses the main
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criticisms leveled against the magazine: that it was politically conventional,
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emphasizing male-dominated electoral politics and skirting controversy; that it
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was sentimental about sisterhood, forever holding up individual women as
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inspirational role models. But her reply to the critics consists of providing
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an exception or two to each of the complaints and then moving swiftly on. She
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dutifully describes the big dramas that got Ms. ' editors all riled
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up--the crusade for and defeat of the ERA; the smear campaign in 1975 by the
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radical Redstockings, who attacked Steinem for work she'd done a decade earlier
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on behalf of a liberal cause that had CIA backing; the nationwide women's
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conference in Houston in 1977. What may have been the larger philosophical
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questions behind these contretemps? Here is Thom's idea of an answer: "Then as
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today, feminism was not an ideology set in stone, but rather an adaptable set
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of attitudes and beliefs."
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And yet, bromidic and blurry though this
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public-relations job is, it is in its way not inaccurate. For Steinem never was
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an editor of the sharp, analytic variety; she was a repackager. Her aim was not
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to subvert the women's magazine but to give it a makeover, to translate
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feminism into something familiar to the middle class. Go back and reread the
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Ms. of the 1970s, and you rediscover how psychological how-to-ism for
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women at home became consciousness-raising for women newly out in the world.
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Confessional narrative became first-person testimonial about the choices and
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changes in women's lives. In the coping-with-children department, the message
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changed from advice to mothers on, say, avoiding "martyr complexes," to advice
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on lobbying for child care and avoiding gender stereotypes with sons and
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daughters. Soft-focus messages about sexuality--the importance of pleasing your
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man--became pointed discussion of abortion rights and the myth of the vaginal
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orgasm.
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By the
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1980s the positions had grown predictable ( Ms. was pro-abortion, pro-day
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care, pro-ERA, pro-welfare rights, pro-clitoral orgasm). But it is no small
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tribute to Ms. that most of the issues it raised over the years are
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still around. Ms. was among the first women's magazines to run pieces
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about sexual harassment, spousal abuse, breast implants, the economic impact of
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divorce--all based on real reporting. The formula was not original and didn't
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pretend to be--"soft" personal stories, plus "hard" facts, with some
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prescriptions for action. It was service journalism, and its depth and quality
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were uneven, as it generally is with service journalism. Ms. also relied
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a great deal on book excerpts, hardly a sign of bold editorial
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entrepreneurship. As for Ms. ' political coverage, crusades heavy on
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symbolism preoccupied the staff through the 1970s (the ERA, the Houston
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conference). If the magazine followed electoral politics a little doggedly, it
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participated in gestural politics a little overenthusiastically. In "Cracking
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the Women's Movement Protection Game" in 1978, a staff writer was honest enough
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to acknowledge the journalistic--and political--pitfalls of such boosterism.
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(She had puffed pro-ERA forces although they were in complete disarray.)
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Ms.' radical critics were right. It was not in the business
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of making sustained ideological arguments or issuing eccentric polemics. Few
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distinctive writers emerged from the magazine, though over the years many
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contributed to it. From the choice of name onward, Ms. ' real specialty
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was promotion--above all of a usable, salable symbolism. It probably didn't
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hurt this larger endeavor that fellow founding editor Letty Cottin Pogrebin,
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the author of How to Make It in a Man's World (1970), had a career as a
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high-powered publicist behind her. But it was Steinem's inspirational role at
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Ms. that was the model for Ms. ' role with its readers. She was
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not a theorist. She was an icon, a catalyst, plugged in to American women via
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the lecture circuit, and to establishment men, such as boyfriends Mike Nichols
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and Mortimer Zuckerman, via the social circuit.
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It's
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fitting, then, that Thom perks up whenever she's describing a party, a gala, a
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television show, a promotional tour. This was the true Ms. "state of
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mind," and there were many such events to boast about. The premier issue in the
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spring of 1972 got a plug from The David Frost Show , on which Steinem
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and others appeared. Then there was a big party at the New York Public Library
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to celebrate. The next year "the magazine's own birthday ... was the occasion
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of larger gatherings, several of them aboard a chartered Circle Line boat."
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"Everything we did," one member of the staff recalled, "got a tremendous amount
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of attention." It would all sound narcissistically frivolous were it not so
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earnest. And so ineffective financially; the magazine was all but broke from
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the start, and stayed that way.
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In the 1980s, "The New Ms. ," which had
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been granted not-for-profit educational status, launched a campus issue to
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attract younger readers, but a hectically busy Steinem was devoting less
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editorial energy to the magazine, and it showed. (You can sense a magazine's
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desperation when it tries to generate hoopla on both its 10 th and
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15 th anniversaries.) In the 1990s, after being sold and resold,
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Ms. lost its spark, but it still carries on. Its covers are as flashy as
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ever, though an arid cleanliness reigns within; it resembles nothing so much as
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an alumnae magazine. ( Ms. has been ad-free since 1990.) Inside the
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current issue you will find, what else, an excerpt from Inside Ms . On
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this 25 th anniversary, there is no gala. Instead, there's a book
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that reads like a genteel obituary.
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