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Catherine Yronwode - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Catherine Yronwode

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Catherine Yronwode

Catherine Yronwode in 1977
Birth name Catherine Anna Manfredi
Born May 12, 1947
San Francisco, California, USA
Nationality USA
Area(s) Writer
Awards Inkpot Award 1983

Catherine "Cat" Yronwode (or catherine "cat" yronwode, born Catherine Anna Manfredi on May 12, 1947) is a writer and editor with an extensive career in the comic book industry and the field of folk magic.

Contents

[edit] Biography

Yronwode was born in San Francisco to "bohemian/academic parents",[1] (Her mother, a writer, was a cousin of the composer Franz Reizenstein.) She grew up in Berkeley and Santa Monica, and traveling abroad. She made window signs for the Cabale Creamery (a folk music coffeehouse in Berkeley) while still in high school. She attended Shimer College in Illinois as an early entrant, but dropped out. Returning to Berkeley, she sold the Berkeley Barb underground newspaper on the streets and catalogued rare books for her parents' bookstore, then took her leave of urban life. From 1965 through 1980 she lived as a rural back-to-the-land hippie in various places, including Tolstoy Peace Farm, an anarchist commune in Washington, the Equitable Farm commune in Mendocino County, and the Garden of Joy Blues commune in Oregon County, Missouri."[1][2]

A freelance writer for many years, Yronwode has been published in a number of fields. She began writing while in her teens, contributing to science fiction fanzines. During the 1960s, she was a member of the Bay Area Astrologers Group, co-writing its weekly astrology column for the underground newspaper San Francisco Good Times Express. She produced record reviews on a freelance basis for the nascent Rolling Stone magazine, and short articles on low-tech living for the Whole Earth Catalog and Country Women magazine. With her mother Liselotte Glozer, she co-wrote and hand-lettered the faux-medieval cookbook, My Lady's Closet Opened and the Secret of Baking Revealed by Two Gentlewomen (Glozer's Booksellers, 1969). During the 1990s, she was a staff editor and contributor to Organic Gardening Magazine. The California Gardener's Book of Lists (Taylor, 1998) is one of her books on gardening. Other subjects she has covered for various magazines include collectibles, popular culture,[3] rural acoustic blues music, early rock'n'roll, and sex magick."[1]

She met her former partner, Peter Paskin, in 1967 and they invented their last name "Yronwode", pronounced "Ironwood", in 1969. She prefers her name to be styled in lower case, as "catherine yronwode." While living at Equitable Farm, Peter and Catherine were interviewed at length by Rolling Stone magazine for an article on hippie anarchist communes. [4] The couple had two children: Cicely (who was born in 1970 and died of SIDS the same year) and Althaea, born in 1971. In 1972, the Yronwodes relocated to The Garden of Joy Blues commune in the Missouri Ozarks. In 1976, Catherine and Peter Yronwode broke up."[1]

In 1980, Yronwode worked as an editor for Ken Pierce Publishing, editing and writing introductions to a line of comic strip reprint books, including titles such as Modesty Blaise by Peter O'Donnell and Jim Holdaway, Mike Hammer by Mickey Spillane, and The Phantom by Lee Falk.[3] She also began a long-running column titled "Fit to Print" for the Comics Buyer's Guide. The column was widely read and gave her a gatekeeper role in comics. Beanworld creator Larry Marder credits her positive review therein for the title's success.[5] Similarly, when Dan Brereton received a poor review from Yronwode for an early project, he felt his "promising career in comics was over".[6] The column, and her work with the APA-I comic-book indexing cooperative, led to freelance editing jobs at Kitchen Sink Press, an important early alternative comics imprint. She wrote The Art of Will Eisner in 1981, an overview of the work of seminal cartoonist Will Eisner, and continued to write books for Kitchen Sink for several years.[7][8][9]

In 1982 she began a partnership with Dean Mullaney, who with his brother Jan had co-founded Eclipse Enterprises, a comic book and graphic novel publisher, in 1976. With Yronwode as editor-in-chief during a period of expanding attention to the art form, Eclipse published many innovative works and championed creators' rights in a field which at the time barely respected them. During her tenure, Eclipse published super hero titles including Miracleman, The Rocketeer, and Zot!. [10] and also brought out graphic novels featuring opera adaptations, such as The Magic Flute and classic children's literature such as The Hobbit.[11] Yronwode won an Inkpot Award in 1983.

In 1985, Eclipse published Women and the Comics, a pioneering book on the history of female comic strip and comic book creators that Yronwode co-wrote with the cartoonist Trina Robbins. As the first book of its kind, Women and the Comics garnered quite a bit of attention from the mainstream press as well as comics fandom. [12][13] [14]

During the 1980s, Eclipse brought out a new line of non-fiction, non-sports trading cards, edited by Yronowde. Controversial political subjects such as the Iran-Contra scandal, the Savings and Loan crisis, the AIDS epidemic, and the Kennedy Assassination, as well as true crime accounts of serial killers, mass murderers, the mafia, and organized crime were covered in these card sets, and Yronwode was widely interviewed in the media about her role in their creation. [15][16][17][18][19][20][21][22][23][24][25][26][27]

Mullaney and Yronwode were married in 1987 and filed for divorce in 1993, after which point Yronwode no longer worked for the company or owned shares in it; Eclipse ceased publication in 1994 and shortly thereafter filed for bankruptcy.[3][9]

Yronwode was involved in three free expression court cases. In the Michael Correa case that led to the founding of the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund, Yronwode was an expert witness for the defense.[28] In 1992, the convicted serial killer Kenneth Bianchi, one-half of the pair known as "The Hillside Stranger", sued Yronwode for 8.5 million dollars for causing an image of his face, which he claimed was his trademark, to be depicted on a trading card. The case was dismissed when the judge opined that if Bianchi had been using his face as a trademark when he was killing women, he would not have tried to hide it from the police; therefore his face was not his trademark. [29][30] Also in 1992, Eclipse was a plaintiff when Nassau County, New York seized a crime-themed trading card series they had published under a county ordinance prohibiting sales of certain trading cards to minors. [31]The case, in which Yronwode testified and the ACLU provided Eclipse's representation, reached the 2nd Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals, where the ordinance was overturned.[32][33][34][35]

Yronwode is also notable in the history of Usenet for having written a complaint that was indirectly responsible for the closing of the University of Texas' mail-to-news gateway by Fletcher Mattox in 1995.

Since the 1990s, Yronwode has written primarily on magic, sacred architecture[36] and folklore subjects, particularly the worldwide use of charms and talismans and the system of African American folk magic called hoodoo. Her books on these subjects include The Lucky W Amulet Archive (online), Hoodoo in Theory and Practice (online), Hoodoo Herb and Root Magic (Lucky Mojo, 2002), and Hoodoo Rootwork Correspondence Course (Lucky Mojo, 2006)."[1][2]

Yronwode lives on an old farmstead in rural Forestville, California in "tantric partnership"[1][2] with Tyagi Nagasiva (now Nagasiva Bryan W Yronwode), whom she met in 1998 and married in 2000. Both Yronwodes worked in the production department of Claypool Comics until that company ceased print publication in 2007. Since 1996, Catherine has run the website luckymojo.com, covering magic, occultism, sex magick, and folklore subjects. When Nagasiva joined her in 1998, the site also hosted his work, and today it presents thousands of text archives, including the works of Aleister Crowley, the lyrics of Pink Floyd's Syd Barrett, essays on sex and architecture, magic spells, and annotated blues lyrics related to hoodoo.[37]

The Yronwodes manufacture and sell hand-made occult items, spiritual supplies, folkloric articfacts, and books through the website's online shop, and co-host a hoodoo podcast[37]. A description of Catherine's occult shop, with samples of her work as a graphic artist of labels for spiritual supplies, appears in the book Spiritual Merchants by Carolyn Morrow Long.[38] Extensive interviews with both of the Yronwodes can be found in Christine Wicker's survey of early 21st century magical practitioners, Not in Kansas Anymore.[2]

Catherine also runs the website southern-spirits.com, which documents 19th and 20th century hoodoo folk magic through slave and ex-slave narratives, vintage newspaper and magazine articles, and interviews with practitioners.[39] Another large site the couple hosts is arcane-archive.org, a repository of archived bbs and usenet posts about religion, magic, and mysticism.[40]

[edit] Bibliography

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c d e f Catherine Yronwode. Catherine Yronwode (biography page). yronwode.com. Retrieved on 2006-09-25.
  2. ^ a b c d Wicker, Christine (2005). Not In Kansas Anymore - A Curious Tale of How Magic is Transforming America. Harper San Francisco. ISBN 0-06-072678-4
  3. ^ a b c Michigan State University Libraries. Special Collections Division Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection "Yps" to "Yugoslavia". lib.msu.edu. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
  4. ^ "Mendocino: Tryin' To Make a Dime in the Big Woods", text by Charles Perry, photographs by Robert Altman,Rolling Stone magazine #73, Dec. 24, 1970
  5. ^ Jeremy York (9 November 1991). Larry Marder interview. Gunk'L'Dunk e-zine. Retrieved on 2006-09-26.
  6. ^ Rick Beckley (May 25, 2000). Interview with Dan Brereton. themestream.com (defunct, via Brereton's website). Retrieved on 2006-09-26.
  7. ^ Catherine Yronwode at the Grand Comic-Book Database
  8. ^ Catherine Yronwode at the Comic Book DB
  9. ^ a b Michigan State University Libraries. Special Collections Division Reading Room Index to the Comic Art Collection "Eclipse Extra" to "Écluses". lib.msu.edu. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
  10. ^ Catherine Yronwode. Eclipse Comics Index. luckymojo.com. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
  11. ^ "Conan in Comics? Yes. Hulk? Sure. But Fafner? Wotan?" by John Rockwell, New York Times (newspaper) April 5, 1990
  12. ^ "Women in the Comics: Assertive and Indedendent Women Make a Comeback" Miami Herald (newspaper), Dec. 1, 1988
  13. ^ "Comic Books Are For Adults Too" by William Singleton, Scripps Howard News Service, Chronicle-Telegram (newspaper), Jan. 7, 1988
  14. ^ "Funny How Things Change" Daily Herald (newspaper), Dec. 28, 1988
  15. ^ "Trading Card Fame for S&L Scoundrels" by Judith Crossen, Reuters, Philadelphia Daily News (newspaper), Sep. 9, 1991
  16. ^ "A Full Deck of Scandals at a Glance" by Susan Trausch, Boston Globe (newspaper), Sep. 18, 1991
  17. ^ "Insider Trading with Keating, Milken", Daily News of Los Angeles (nwspaper), Oct. 20, 1991
  18. ^ "Price tag on JFK intrigue Assassination aficionados spawn cottage industry" by Kathryn Jones, The Dallas Morning News (newspaper), Nov. 22, 1991
  19. ^ "Kennedy Assassination is an Industry with Growing Market", Associated Press, Elyria Chronicle-Telegram (newspaper), Nov. 28, 1991
  20. ^ "Ban Urged on Sale of Crime Cards", The Record (newspaper), Apr. 30, 1992
  21. ^ "'True Crime' Cards Thriving Despite Outrage", New York Times (newspaper), Jun. 16, 1992
  22. ^ "Killer Cards Hit Capital Stores Amid Criticism", Sacramento Bee (newspaper), Jun. 19, 1992
  23. ^ "Killer Cards: Two groups trying to deal fatal blow to criminal cards", The Oregonian (newspaper), Aug. 18, 1992
  24. ^ "AIDS cards to include condoms", Milwaukee Journal Sentinal (newspaper), Sep. 23, 1992)
  25. ^ "AIDS Awareness is in the cards", Dallas Morning News (newspaper), Jul. 7, 1993
  26. ^ "AIDS Activism turns to cards" Dayton Daily News (newspaper), Jul. 13, 1993
  27. ^ "Ban Sought on Cards depicting AIDS victim" Boston Globe (newspaper) Jan. 15, 1994
  28. ^ Censorship of Comics Bibliography: 1980s. Comic Book Legal Defense Fund. Retrieved on 2006-09-26.
  29. ^ "Serial Killer Sues Trading Card Maker", San Jose Mercury News, Dec. 18, 1992
  30. ^ "Card-Carrying Rebels: Two Guerilla Journalists Turn Crime and Crises into Camp Collectibles" by Kathleen Donnelly, San Jose Mercury News (newspaper), Jan. 10, 1993
  31. ^ "Nassau County Limits Sale of Crime Trading Cards". New York Times (newspaper), Jun 16, 1992
  32. ^ "Nassau Is Faulted for Law Over Killer Trading Cards", New York Times (newspaper), Oct. 17, 1995
  33. ^ Arts & First Amendment Issues: Comic Books. First Amendment Center. Retrieved on 2006-09-26.
  34. ^ Battling Against Censorship: Killer Cards. Long Island Newsday. Retrieved on 2006-09-26.
  35. ^ Eclipse Enterprises v. Gulotta. FindLaw. Retrieved on 2006-09-26.
  36. ^ "Finding the Unexpected on www.ididn'tknowthat.com", New York Times (newspaper), Jul. 21, 1991
  37. ^ a b Catherine Yronwode. Lucky Mojo Site Index. luckymojo.com. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
  38. ^ Long, Carolyn Morrow (2001) Spiritual Merchants: Religion, Magic, and Commerce. University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 1572331097
  39. ^ Catherine Yronwode. Southern Spirits Site Index. southern-spirits.com. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.
  40. ^ Nagasiva Yronwode. Arcane Archive Site Directory. arcane-archive.org. Retrieved on 2007-10-31.

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