The Feminist Library is a special collection and archive of materials related to feminist literature and activism in London and the wider UK, including books, poetry pamphlets, and periodicals. Since 2020, the library is located in the Sojourner Truth Community Centre, Peckham, Southwark, South London.
The library faced a financial crisis in 2003 when Lambeth Council substantially increased the rent on the building.[3]
Four years later, in 2007, the management committee called an emergency meeting as a final attempt to gather support. The meeting was well attended and the library was saved, although it still struggles ,[when?] depending on grants to survive.
Librarians for Tomorrow
In January 2010, the library announced that it had received a grant from Awards for All,[4] which it intended to use to train volunteers in radical librarianship, using the library itself as a resource. In March 2010, fifteen volunteers were chosen from many applicants and they began working at the library in April 2010. One of the trainees began writing an anonymous blog about her experiences.[5]
Opening hours had increased from 2013 to 2014 but remained dependent on the availability of volunteers. In 2015 the library celebrated its 40th anniversary.[6] By 2018 it was open afternoons or evenings from Tuesday to Saturday.[7]
Sojourner Truth Resource Centre, 2020 - present
The Feminist Library opened in the Sojourner Truth Resource Centre in Peckham in 2020.[8]
Collection
The library started as a small collection of contemporary material, but is now considered[by whom?] to be the most significant library of feminist material in England. As of 2010[update], the collection included some 7,500 books, of which around 5,000 are non-fiction, 500 poetry publications, and 1,500 periodical titles, many self-published, taking about 85 metres of shelving.[9] There is also a large number of pamphlets, held at the Bishopsgate Institute.[10]
Poetry and fiction
The amount of poetry and fiction in the library is unusual for a special collection focused on a political movement. The reason for this is that the library wanted to ensure individual women were represented as part of their liberation, as explained by Gail Chester, a member of the library's management committee, in an interview with Anne Welsh in 2007.[11]
^David, Miriam (9 December 2010). "Diana Leonard obituary". The Guardian www.theguardian.com. Archived from the original on 9 September 2018. Retrieved 22 November 2014.
^John, Angela V. (6 November 2014). "Leonore Davidoff obituary". The Guardian www.theguardian.com. Archived from the original on 22 November 2014. Retrieved 22 November 2014.