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Signs Journal Profile
Signs Journal

@SignsJournal

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The leading international journal in women's studies, Signs has since 1975 been at the forefront of new directions in feminist scholarship.

Chicago, IL USA
Joined August 2011
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
4 months
Celebrating 50 years of creative, feminist voices, groundbreaking work, and relentless advocacy, our anniversary issue, Big Feminism, is out now (sub. req’d):
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
1 month
Happy New Year to all! Signs is moving platforms this year — Keep up with us at We hope to see you there!
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
1 month
Next year, Signs is moving to BlueSky! Don't miss your chance to keep up with us at — We hope to see you there!
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
Signs is moving to BlueSky next year! Keep up with us at
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
Did you hear that Signs is switching platforms next year? Don't miss your chance to keep up with us at
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
Signs is moving to BlueSky! To stay updated next year, follow us at
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
Important announcement: Signs is moving platforms next year! To stay updated, follow us at
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
“This was a difficult book to write; it resisted easy resolutions and took me through bloody depths alongside the Black women who clawed themselves back from the brink.” —Kali N. Gross on her discomfort in writing Vengeance Feminism
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
“Gross challenges any idea that feminism isn’t or shouldn’t be violent, and it calls on us to understand that for some women, justice will be had by any and every means necessary.” —Michelle B. Taylor on Kali N. Gross’ Vengeance Feminism
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
“[Gross's] storytelling makes us uncomfortable, and it should. She complicates the ways scholars have simplistically understood capricious acts of violence.” —@kcarterjackson on Kali N. Gross’s Vengeance Feminism
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
"American culture insists that Black women in situations made desperate by a nation built on their exploitation should simply accept their lot.” —@ProfKori on Kali N. Gross’ Vengeance Feminism
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
"Both personal vengeance and collective resistance remain joined: a bicephalic entanglement of emotions within a predatory empire." —Joy James
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
RT @reineayiti: This issue of @SignsJournal short takes features some of my favorite #Blackfeminist scholars including @kcarterjackson @Pro
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
How should instances of Black women taking the law into their own hands be understood when Black women have been denied the protection of the state and have never experienced any semblance of "justice" within the US legal system? Read for free!
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
2 months
The latest Short Takes forum, on Kali Gross's Vengeance Feminism, explores the role that retribution, anger, and violence have played in the lives of Black women. Read @kcarterjackson, Joy James, @ProfKori, & Michelle Taylor, available free!
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
3 months
"Criminalizing pregnancy complications has become a real threat. These policies reflect a deep-seated urge to control reproduction and women’s bodies that is often tied to a larger right-wing worldview." —Zoe Sullivan
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
3 months
"As I read about the Belén in Argentina..., I thought of the South Carolina Belén and how many other Beléns there are and will be in the post-Dobbs United States." —Julia McReynolds-Pérez
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
3 months
"Ana Elena Correa transmits us hope—in feminism, in collective action, and in sorority and solidarity. It is a message we desperately need to hear and a strategy we need to embrace in the US." —Cora Fernández Anderson
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
3 months
What Happened to Belén "paints a harrowing portrait of what Belén had to endure...—and much of it was all too similar to what women, especially women of color, have faced in the US," writes Kylie Cheung in our latest Short Takes forum. Available free!
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
3 months
What can the rest of the world learn from Argentine feminists' successes? "Hope, networks, learning from the past, staying vigilant in the present, & working toward the future—that is our task, yesterday, today, & tomorrow as well," @anaecorrea writes.
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@SignsJournal
Signs Journal
3 months
Belén, a woman convicted of homicide after having a miscarriage, spent 2 years in prison. Her "ultimate victory," Zoe Sullivan writes, "would not have been possible without the organizational stability and solidarity of Argentina’s feminist movement."
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