Trina Greene Brown is the creator of Parenting for Liberation.
Read MoreMaureen Brady is the author of the novels Ginger's Fire, Folly, and Give Me Your Good Ear.
Read MoreAlida Brill, a feminist activist and social critic, is the author of Nobody's Business: The Paradox of Privacy and co-author of the award-winning Dimensions of Tolerance: What Americans Believe about Civil Liberties.
Read MoreEllen Bravo is a long-time activist, author, former director of 9 to 5, the National Association of Working Women, and current head of Family Values @ Work, a network of state coalitions working for family-friendly policies. A well-known speaker, she has been described as "moving, witty, and sometimes bawdy."
Read MoreSarah Booker is a translator.
Read MoreMx Justin Vivian Bond is a trans-genre artist living in New York City.
Read MoreBorn in Harlem, Safiya Bukhari joined the Black Panther Party in 1969. Bukhari then co-founded the New York Free Mumia Abu-jamal Coalition and was co-chair of the Jericho Movemnet to Free US Political Prisoners and Prisoners of War.
Read MoreOlive Tilford Dargan (1869–1968), also known through her pseudonym Fielding Burke, was a poet, playwright and novelist. She was a feminist and a socialist, providing one of the few strong southern female voices to the proletarian fiction of the 1930s.
Read MoreAlexandra Brodsky is an editor at Feministing.com and co-founder of Know Your IX, a national student campaign against campus gender-based violence.
Read MoreLady Borton has received two honorary degrees for her work with all sides during and after the Vietnam War and is currently Adjunct Professor of Southeast Asian Studies at the University of Ohio. She is author of four books about Vietnam and has translated Vietnamese poetry, fiction, and memoirs.
Read MoreDorothy Bryant is a native San Franciscan. From 1953 to 1976 she taught music and English in Bay Area high schools and colleges. She began writing fiction and articles in 1960.
Read MoreRenate Bridenthal is professor of history at Brooklyn College of the City University of New York. She was a founder and coordinator of the Brooklyn College women's studies program and a co-founder at the City University Women's Coalition. Bridenthal is co-editor of Becoming Visible: Women in European History and of When Biology Became Destiny: Women in Weimar and Nazi Germany.
Read MoreRobin M. Boylorn is Assistant Professor of Interpersonal and Intercultural Communication at The University of Alabama. She is the author of the award-winning monograph Sweetwater: Black Women and Narratives of Resilience (Peter Lang 2013), and co-editor of Critical Autoethnography: Intersecting Cultural Identities in Everyday Life (Left Coast Press 2014).
Read MorePhilip Boehm is an American playwright, theatre director and literary translator.
Read MoreZheng Bijun is professor emerita of history and the former director of the Women's Studies Center at Peking University. She has published widely on women in Chinese history.
Read MoreLillie Devereux Blake (1833-1913) was a fiction writer, essayist, journalist, lecturer, and activist. She was a prominent organizer for the women's suffrage movement and was instrumental in the founding of Barnard College.
Read MoreNguyen Thi Thanh Bình has a degree in Vietnamese and foreign literature. Since 1978, she has been an editor at the Women's Publishing House (Hanoi), where she is responsible for Vietnamese literature.
Read MoreLuke Dani Blue (they/them) is a writer whose work has appeared in the Colorado Review, Crab Orchard Review, and Best American Short Stories 2016.
Read MoreEvi Blaikie was born in Paris to Hungarian Jewish immigrants less than a year before the outbreak of World War II. Narrowly escaping the Holocaust and subsequently moving throughout Europe with her family, Evi attended the University of Vienna, Austria. In 1960, Evi left Europe, moved to Venezuela, and immigrated from there to the United States. Now, Evi works part time for an environmental organization. Magda’s Daughter: A Hidden Child’s Journey Home is her first full-length work.
Read MoreDalya Bilu is a well-known translator of Hebrew literature and has translated the works of Zeruya Shalev, A. B. Yehoshua, Yaakov Shabtai, Aharon Appelfeld, Judith Katzir, Batia Gur, and more. She has been awarded the Israel Culture and Education Ministry Prize for Translation, the Times Literary Supplement Prize and the Jewish Book Council Award for Hebrew-English Translation.
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