This book is stunning! I was engrossed with every essay and spent time within each one going to the works cited to bookmark them for further research. All fields have for too long been dominated by men, and white men in particular. This book is by no means the end of the process toward rectifying this, but it is an absolute gem and a deeply needed exploration of the voices, works and individuals who have been left out of design. This compilation explores so many amazing women designers, typographers, art directors etc… this belongs on every serious designer and artist’s shelf.
I also wanted to include a quotation that really made me pause and reflect from the chapter “Press On! Feminist Historiography of Print Culture and Collective Organizing” by MMS (Maryam Fanni, Matilda Flodmark, & Sara Kaaman):
“…as the British cultural theorist Angela McRobbie has proposed, the concept of creativity and the identification with and ideal of being creative in one’s professional role has served as a political propaganda tool in the United Kingdom. She believes that the so-called creative ideal—which weirdly suggests that some professions are more creative than others—produces an individualist self-employed worker who above all loves to work, regardless of financial compensation and working conditions. McRobbie believes that this ideal worker affects conditions for all jobholders, who are expected to adapt to and behave like this figure. Today, there is a strong narrative—perpetuated through advertising, TV, and social media—that equates freedom with working on your laptop in a café, on your phone on the bus, or just about anywhere. Women and Black and Indigenous People of Color are the people most affected by this deterioration in living and working conditions and the demand for flexibility.”