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Gloria Kaufman directed, produced and co-wrote this video magazine exploring the relationship between feminism and humor. An illustrated lecture by host and co-writer Madeleine Pabis is supplemented by two routines by feminist humorist Kate Clinton, who, says Pabis, "applauds lesbianism in an open and natural way"; an "Emma Goldman puppet show," also hosted by Pabis, essentially a burlesque on Goldman's legal battles that closes with a short sketch about the naming of Planned Parenthood; and an excerpt from a lecture by Una Stannard about male "womb envy."
Gloria Kaufman lectures on goddess worship. Date and location unknown. Kaufman's lecture begins two minutes into first side, following a fragment of a lecture by Madeline Pabis on the fear of lesbianism.
Coffeehouse program on the topic of witches featuring several performers and speakers, held at the Sister Space Collective at Indiana University Purdue University Fort Wayne on October 28, 1977. Gloria Kaufman begins speaking at 49:30 on the first side of the tape. Calling herself an "ersatz witch," she says she was asked to attend the coffeehouse program in order to help with "putting out a grand spell because [anti-gay rights activist] Anita Bryant was in town." The program begins with updates on a strike at Essex Wiring Company in Elwood, Indiana; an upcoming coffeehouse program at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship in Elkhart, Indiana; and a demonstration in support of human rights and gay rights in response to a visit by Anita Bryant to the Embassy Theatre in Fort Wayne, Indiana. The second side of the tape contains content unrelated to the coffeehouse program (likely a dub of a commercial recording of a feminist song).
Opening Session of the 1977 National Women's Conference in Houston, Texas, on November 11, 1977, followed by a portion of a session on Sexual Preference Restoration. The opening session features an address by Representative Barbara Jordan.
An illustrated lecture on the semiotics of clothes, written, narrated and directed by Gloria Kaufman, who models a variety of outfits at the close of the program to demonstrate her arguments.
Gloria Kaufman gives part 2 of a lecture entitled "Patriarchy, a Macrohistorical View" at a session of B250 Interdisciplinary Analysis of Women's Role on January 28, 1993, at Indiana University South Bend. Part 2 of 2.
Gloria Kaufman gives part 1 of a lecture entitled "Patriarchy, a Macrohistorical View" at a session of B250 Interdisciplinary Analysis of Women's Role on January 21, 1993, at Indiana University South Bend. Part 1 of 2.
Part 1 of the panel "Black Women: Uplifting Voices," presented at a class session of B250 Interdisciplinary Analysis of Women's Role on February 9, 1989, at Indiana University South Bend. Features black women sharing their experiences with a class comprised predominantly of white women. Moderated by Marva Leonard-Dent, an assistant city attorney for South Bend. Featuring panelists Rebecca Johnson, senior health claims processor and unit leader at Holy Cross Shared Services; Virginia "Ginny" Brown Calvin, principal of Muessel Elementary School in South Bend; Janice "Jan" Hall, assistant vice president for employment and employee relations manager at First Source Bank; and Karen White, assistant director for the university division and director of affirmative action at IU South Bend.
Part 2 of the panel "Black Women: Uplifting Voices," presented at a session of B250 Interdisciplinary Analysis of Women's Role on February 9, 1989, at Indiana University South Bend. Features black women sharing their experiences with a class comprised predominantly of white women. Moderated by Marva Leonard-Dent, an assistant city attorney for South Bend. Featuring panelists Rebecca Johnson, senior health claims processor and unit leader at Holy Cross Shared Services; Virginia "Ginny" Brown Calvin, principal of Muessel Elementary School in South Bend; Janice "Jan" Hall, assistant vice president for employment and employee relations manager at First Source Bank; and Karen White, assistant director for the university division and director of affirmative action at IU South Bend.
A panel discussion featuring Dora Reynolds, host; Eileen Bender, moderator, Mary Kay Blakely, writer; Dolores Frese, professor; and Sharon Wildey, attorney. Directed and edited by Gloria Kaufman. The opening of the program is not included in the VHS copy in the IU South Bend Archives, which abruptly begins with Dolores Frese discussing legal remedies to address pornography.
Three recordings featuring feminist witch Z. Budapest during her April 1977 visit to the Michiana area. In the first recording (45000000022399), Budapest conducts a workshop on ritual bathing and other subjects in Mt. Pleasant, Michigan, on April 8, 1977. This a second-generation recording, transferred from an original video recording not held by the IU South Bend Archives. In the second recording (45000000022407), Budapest is interviewed on April 9, 1977, by Gloria Kaufman, who long supported and promoted Budapest's work. The third recording (45000000022415) is a edited, condensed version of that interview created for the South Bend Media Network, with host segments by Kaufman.
Examines the latest currents in feminist theology. Discusses liberation theology with Carol P. Christ and new feminist Z. Budapest, who demonstrate the self-blessing ritual, and talks with Elizabeth Schuessler Fiorenza who advocates a radical reconstruction of Christian theology and a repudiation of religious texts that promote violence. Looks at the prophetic tradition in Christianity with Madonna Kolbenschlag. An update of the 1977 production.
Gloria Kaufman gives a lecture entitled "Fear of Lesbianism" at a session of B250 Interdisciplinary Analysis of Women's Role on April 9, 1990, at Indiana University South Bend.