Judy Freespirit papers, 1971-2009

Collection context

Summary

Creators:
Abstract:
Extent:
9 linear feet (7 cartons, 1 oversized folder)
Language:
Preferred citation:

Judy Freespirit papers. GLBT Historical Society

Background

Scope and content:

The collection includes manuscripts and journals; subject files on various activist, therapeutic, and religious topics; and audiotapes, videotapes, and film of various performances, including Freespirit’s own. Some of these have been digitized. There are also ephemera, such as t-shirts, buttons and photographs. This collection complements another collection of Freespirit’s papers at the June Mazer Lesbian Archive in Los Angeles. GSSO linked terms: http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/GSSO_000381; http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/GSSO_004301; http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/GSSO_008492; http://purl.obolibrary.org/obo/GSSO_008520

Biographical / historical:

Judy Freespirit (Judith Louise Berkowitz Ackerman) was an activist, writer, and performer, focused on the subjects of women, lesbians, Jewish culture, fat acceptance, disability rights, and incest survival. Freespirit was of the earliest members of the fat acceptance movement, as coauthor (with Vivian Mayer) of the 1973 Fat Liberation Manifesto, and later a performer with Fat Chance and Fat Lip Reader’s Theater. She is the author of four books: Daddy’s Girl, Keeping it in the Family, Whole Lotta Quakin’ Goin’ On, and A Slim Volume of Fat Poems. Freespirit was born in 1936 to a working-class Jewish family in Detroit, Michigan. From an early age, she was subject to incestuous sexual abuse by her father; from the age of five, she was also pressured by her mother to diet. Dance and theatre became her primary methods of survival. After an early marriage and the birth of a son, she finished college and became Director of Social Services at a psychiatric hospital. She later became involved in the women’s liberation movement, and came out in the early 1970s as a lesbian. This led to further activism, including an extended period of work against the Briggs Initiative in Sonoma County. After her asthma and environmental allergies became increasingly disabling, she became part of the Berkeley disability movement and worked with the World Institute on Disabilities (WID) on issues of fat, health and disabilities. After many years of performing and activism, Freespirit died in 2010.

Acquisition information:
The collection was donated to the GLBT Historical Society by Judy Freespirit in 2008.

Access and use

Restrictions:

Collection is open for research. Funding for processing this collection was provided by the National Historical Publications and Records Commission (NHPRC).

Terms of access:

Copyright to material has been transferred to the GLBT Historical Society, with the exception of the photos by Cathy Cade in Box 4, whose copyright remains with the photographer. All requests for reproductions and/or permission to publish or quote from material must be submitted in writing to the GLBT Historical Society Archivist. Permission for reproductions and/or permission to publish the Cade photos is given on behalf of the GLBT Historical Society as the owner of the physical items and is not intended to include or imply permission of the copyright holder, which must also be obtained by the researcher.

Preferred citation:

Judy Freespirit papers. GLBT Historical Society

Location of this collection:
989 Market Street, Lower Level
San Francisco, CA 94103, US
Contact:
(415) 777-5455