Spare Rib

Spare Rib
Spare Rib magazine cover Dec 1972.jpg
Spare Rib cover, December 1972; featuring John Cleese on the cover
EditorCollective from late 1973
CategoriesFeminist Magazine
Year founded1972
Final issue1993
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Websitehttp://www.bl.uk/spare-rib (archive)

Spare Rib was a second-wave feminist magazine in the United Kingdom that emerged from the counter culture of the late 1960s as a consequence of meetings involving, among others, Rosie Boycott and Marsha Rowe. Spare Rib is now recognised as an iconic magazine, which shaped debate about feminism in the UK, and as such it was digitised by the British Library in 2015. The magazine contained new writing and creative contributions which challenged stereotypes and supported collective solutions. It was published between 1972 and 1993. The title derives from the Biblical reference to Eve, the first woman, created from Adam's rib.

History

The first issue of Spare Rib was published in June 1972. It was distributed by Seymour Press to big chains including W. H. Smith and Menzies — although Smith's refused to stock issue 13 due to the use of an expletive on the issue's back cover. Selling at first around 20,000 copies a month, it was circulated more widely through women's groups and networks.

Its purpose, as described in its editorial, was to investigate and present alternatives to the traditional gendered roles of virgin, wife or mother.

The name Spare Rib started as a joke referring to biblical Eve being fashioned out of Adam’s rib, implying that a woman had no independence from the beginning of time. This held the witty, subversive connotations the editors had been looking for.

The Spare Rib Manifesto stated:

The concept of Women's Liberation is widely misunderstood, feared and ridiculed. Many women remain isolated and unhappy. We want to publish Spare RIB to try to change this. We believe that women's liberation is of vital importance to women now and, intrinsically, to the future of our society. Spare RIB will reach out to all women, cutting across material, economic and class barriers, to approach them as individuals in their own right.

Early articles were linked closely with left-leaning political theories of the time, especially anti-capitalism and the exploitation of women as consumers through fashion. The covers were often of a striking design.

As the women's movement evolved during the 1970s, the magazine became a focus for sometimes acrimonious debate among members of the many streams that emerged within the movement, such as socialist feminism, radical feminism, revolutionary feminism, lesbian feminism, liberal feminism and black feminism. It included contributions from well-known international feminist writers, activists and theorists, as well as stories about ordinary women in their own words. Articles tackled many different threads of feminism from many different angles. Subjects included "liberating orgasm", "kitchen sink racism", anorexia and the practice of female genital mutilation. The magazine reflected the sometimes turbulent debates about how best to tackle issues such as sexuality and racism.

Suffering from the effects of falling subscriptions and advertising revenue, Spare Rib ceased publication in 1993.

Editors

The founders of Spare Rib set out to set the record straight on Women's Liberation. They sought to reach out to all women and in their manifesto they explain what was wrong with contemporary women's magazines and how their alternative would offer realistic solutions to the problems experienced by women.

Spare Rib became a collective by the end of 1973 (see Spare Rib Reader, edited by Marsha Rowe, and Rosie Boycott, A Nice Girl Like Me). The collective editorial policy was to: "collectively decide on articles that they publish, and work closely with the contributors. Accept articles from men only when there is no other resource available. 35p per copy."

Design

According to Marsha Rowe, one of the original magazine designers, the "look" of Spare Rib, which resulted in so many iconic and striking covers, was born out of necessity. It had to look like a women's magazine, yet with contents that did not reflect the conformist stereotyping of women. Spare Rib covers were often controversial. It had to suggest the familiarity of women's magazines – "like a good friend, intimate, loyal, supportive – while also being challenging, questioning, exciting and radical". The designers had to transform the name Spare Rib into a magazine title. They had to create the front cover look, and an overall style for the pages inside the magazine. The design had to be both stable and flexible, to allow for future change while retaining the feel and basic identity. Integral to every decision was cost. "Money and professionalism went hand in hand."

New, young illustrators and photographers were keen to work for the magazine, enjoying the challenge of finding a visual language to express the new ideas of the magazine.

Finding non-sexist advertising in accordance with the values of the magazine was another challenge.

Legacy

It was reported by The Guardian in April 2013 that the magazine was due to be relaunched, with the journalist Charlotte Raven at the helm. It was subsequently announced that while a magazine and website were to be launched, it would now have a different name.

In May 2015, the British Library put its complete archive of Spare Rib online. The project was led by Polly Russell, the curator behind an oral history of the women's liberation movement. The archive is presented with new views on the subject matter and themes curated by expert commentators. The British Library website describes the value of Spare Rib for current readers and researchers:

Spare Rib was the largest feminist circulating magazine of the Women's Liberation Movement (WLM) in Britain of the 1970s and 80s. It remains one of the movement's most visible achievements. The trajectory of Spare Rib charted the rise and demise of the Women's Liberation Movement and as a consequence is of interest to feminist historians, academics and activists and to those studying social movements and media history.

In February 2019 the British Library announced a possible suspension of access to the archive in the event of a no-deal Brexit, due to possible problems about copyright, but the suspension never occurred.


This page was last updated at 2022-05-17 17:27 UTC. Update now. View original page.

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