Marjolijn de Jager teaches French, Dutch, and literary translation at New York University and works as an independent literary translator.
Read MoreM.J. Daymond is a professor of English at the University of KwaZulu-Natal and an editor of Women Writing Africa: The Southern Region. She specializes in feminist theory and African women's narratives of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
Read MoreRebecca Harding Davis published 12 books and many serialized novels, stories, and essays.
Read MoreBridgett M. Davis’s debut novel Shifting Through Neutral was published in 2004.
Read MoreEsther David is the author of multiple books, including The Walled City, Book of Rachel, and Shalom India Housing Society.
Read MoreDebanuj DasGupta is assistant professor of feminist studies at University of California at Santa Barbara.
Read MoreLisa Darms is Senior Archivist at the Fales Library & Special Collections at NYU, and founder of the Fales Riot Grrrl Collection.
Read MoreNikki Darling’s music criticism and essays appear regularly in the Los Angeles Times, LA Weekly, KCET Artbound, and others.
Read MoreBarbara Danish taught creative writing at New York University.
Read MoreDoris Groshen Daniels is professor emeritus of history and political science
Read MoreGerty Dambury is a theater director, novelist, and poet from Guadeloupe.
Read MoreMary Doyle Curran (1917-1981) taught English at Wellesley College and Queens College, CUNY.
Read MoreMargo Culley is Professor of English at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. She is also the editor of American Women’s Autobiography: Fea(s)ts of Memory and A Day at a Time: Diary Literature of American Women.
Read MoreSor Juana Inés de la Cruz (1651–1695), a seventeenth-century Mexican nun, was a brilliant poet, playwright, and essayist whose persistently defended of the intellectual rights of women.
Read MoreJennifer Croft is the founding editor of The Buenos Aires Review.
Read MoreClare Coss is a playwright, psychotherapist, and activist.
Read MoreBrittney C. Cooper is Assistant Professor of Women’s and Gender Studies and Africana Studies at Rutgers University.
Read MoreAlice H. Cook (1903-1998) was a professor in the New York State College of Industrial and Labor Relations at Cornell University and a member of the executive board of Cornell's Women's Studies Program. Her books include The Most Difficult Revolution: Women and Trade Unions and The Working Mother: A Survey of Problems and Progress in Nine Countries.
Read MoreLindsey Collen is the author of of five novels: There Is a Tide, Getting Rid of It, Mutiny, Misyon Garson, and The Rape of Sita. She is also a longtime activist for women's rights and social justice.
Read MoreSusan L. Cocalis is an associate professor of German at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She is coeditor of Beyond the Eternal Feminine, and the editor of the international women's studies newsletter Women in German.
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