In 2007, the Society had over 1000 members from around the world.[4]
History
1985 Medieval Feminist Newsletter
The origins of SMFS lay in the Medieval Feminist Newsletter, begun in 1985 by the organization's founders, Elizabeth Robertson, E. Jane Burns, and Roberta (Bonnie) Krueger, who were later joined by Thelma Fenster who organised the "Commentary Column", and assisted by Colleen Anderson who typed the first newsletters.[5] The founders met at the airport after the 1985 International Medieval Congress at Kalamazoo, Michigan, where "few sessions had considered women and none had been feminist".[5]
Robertson remembers that:
"The Newsletter sprang into being because of shared dissatisfaction - and the history of the Newsletter's foundations testifies to the fact that dissatisfaction and grumbling can be productive."
— Elizabeth Robertson, Medieval Feminist Forum, 42.5 (2006), p. 15
The Newsletter was the "first publication to consider the relationship between feminism and medieval studies".[5] The Newsletter was illustrated with the image of a dragon chasing the Virgin Mary as she read a Book of Hours, which was drawn by Megan Brill to avoid copyright infringements.[5]
1992 Society for Medieval Feminist Scholarship
The group became SMFS in 1992, driven by a desire to establish more formal networks for communication, funding, and with a view to producing publications.[6]Jacqueline Murray was the first president.[5]
Medieval Feminist Forum
Since 1999, SFMS has produced Medieval Feminist Forum, a peer-reviewed journal which became an online-only journal in 2009.
SMFS provides a Mentoring Exchange at most major conferences where it has a presence. It also awards several annual prizes, including one for the Best Graduate Essay, Best First Article of Feminist Scholarship on the Middle Ages, and Best First Book of Feminist Scholarship on the Middle Ages. It also manages a Listserv, MEDFEM-L.
^Bennett, Judith, and Ruth Mazo Karras, eds. (2013). The Oxford Handbook of Women and Gender in Medieval Europe. Oxford: OUP. pp. 3–4. ISBN9780199582174. {{cite book}}: |first= has generic name (help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
^Watt, Diane, ed. (1997). Medieval Women in their Communities. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. p. 1. ISBN0802042899.