Diane Anderson-Minshall

Diane Anderson-Minshall
Anderson-Minshall in 2008
Anderson-Minshall in 2005

Diane Anderson-Minshall (b. March 19, 1968) is an American journalist best known for her writing and editing of lesbian lifestyle magazines.

Born in Southern California she moved to Payette, Idaho at an early age. It was there that she began her journalism career at 13, covering the school beat for the Independent Enterprise. In high school, she worked for the Gate City Journal (Nyssa, Oregon) and the Daily Argus Observer (Ontario, Oregon). She attended Tulane University and Xavier University, both schools in New Orleans, UC Berkeley, Chaffey College, and Idaho State University before graduating from San Francisco's New College of California.

In 1990, she became the editor of the Crescent City Star, a weekly LGBT newspaper in New Orleans. In 1993, she became an editor at On Our Backs, the lesbian erotic magazine founded by Nan Kinney and Debbie Sundahl and formerly edited by sexpert Susie Bright. A year later, she and fellow On Our Backs employees, including Heather Findlay, left the magazine and founded their own publication, the lesbian entertainment magazine Girlfriends.

During her tenure at Girlfriends and later at other publications including Curve Magazine, Anderson-Minshall became known for her celebrity interviews, which were occasionally referenced and quoted by mainstream publications like People, US Weekly, New York Times, and The National Enquirer. Several actresses including Dana Plato,[1] Angelina Jolie [2] and singer Sinéad O'Connor [3] "came out" as lesbian or bisexual women in interviews with Anderson-Minshall, although O'Connor later retracted her statements.[citation needed]

In 1999 Anderson-Minshall founded the short-lived women's lifestyle magazine, Alice. As a freelance writer, she has been published in dozens of magazines including Passport, Bust, Bitch, Venus, Utne and Seventeen. She became an editor at the lesbian publication, Curve, in 2004 and is currently that magazine's editor-in-chief.

She has received a handful of honors for her work including a 1998 Visa Versa award for her celebrity journalism and Power Ups Ten Amazing Gay Women in Showbiz Award in 2006. In 2000, Anderson-Minshall was a finalist for the Exceptional Women in Publishing (EWIP)'s Woman of the Year Award.

Anderson-Minshall co-edited of the anthology of LGBT youth writing, Becoming: Young Ideas on Gender, Race and Sexuality, and her often autobiographical essays have appeared in numerous anthologies.

Anderson-Minshall writes the Blind Eye Mystery Series (Blind Curves, Blind Leap and the Lambda Literary Award finalist Blind Faith)through Bold Strokes Books with her transgender husband Jacob Anderson-Minshall. Her first solo fiction, Punishment with Kisses was published in 2009 by Bold Strokes Books.

Diane and her husband, Jacob Anderson-Minshall, who penned the nationally syndicated column "TransNation", have been together since 1990. They were legally married March 19, 2006 after Jacob changed sex from female to male. They previously were domestic partners registered in the state of California.

Anthologies

  • Reading The L Word: Outing Contemporary Television
  • Bitchfest: Ten Years of Cultural Criticism from the Pages of Bitch Magazine
  • Body Outlaws
  • Closer to Home: Bisexuality and Feminism
  • Young Wives Tales: New Adventures in Love and Partnership
  • 50 Ways to Support Lesbian and Gay Equality: The Complete Guide to Supporting Family, Friends, Neighbors or Yourself
  • Tough Girls

External links

References

  1. ^ Anderson-Minshall recalls Plato
  2. ^ Anderson-Minshall on AfterEllen.com recalls Jolie's Interview
  3. ^ [1] June 9, 2000, Los Angeles Times Reports O'Connor came out to Anderson-Minshall

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