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== Early life ==
== Early life ==
Steinem was born in [[Toledo, Ohio]]. Her mother, Ruth Nuneviller, was of part German descent. Her [[Jewish-American]] father, Leo Steinem, was a traveling antiques dealer (with trailer and family in tow) and the son of immigrants from [[Germany]] and [[Poland]].<ref>http://www.wargs.com/other/steinem.html</ref> The family split in [[1944]], when he went to [[California]] to find work while Gloria lived with her mother in Toledo. As a child in Toledo, she cared for her ill mother and helped support the family. She also had a sister named Susanne.
Steinem was born in [[Toledo, Ohio]]. Her mother, Ruth Nuneviller, was of part German descent. Her [[Jewish-American]] father, Leo Steinem, was a traveling antiques dealer (with trailer and family in tow) and the son of immigrants from [[Germany]] and [[Poland]].<ref>http://www.wargs.com/other/steinem.html</ref> The family split in [[1944]], when he went to [[California]] to find work while Gloria lived with her mother in Toledo. As a child in Toledo, she cared for her ill mother and helped support the family along with her sister Susanne.

Years later, Steinem described her relationship to her mother as pivotal to understanding of social injustices. At 34, Ruth Steinem had a "nervous breakdown" that left her invalid, trapped in delusional fantasies that occasionally turned violent.<ref>Steinem, Glora. ''Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions.'' New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1984. pp. 129-138.</ref> She changed "from an energetic, fun-loving, book-loving" woman into "someone who was afraid to be alone, who could not hang on to reality long enough to hold a job, and who could rarely concentrate long enough to read a book." Ruth spent months in-and-out of sanatoriums for the mentally disabled. Before her illness, Ruth had graduated with honors from [[Oberlin College]], worked her way up to newspaper editor, and even taught a year of calculus at the college level. Steinem's father, however, demanded that her mother relinquish her career, and divorced her after she became sick. The subsequent apathy of doctors, along with the social punishments for career-driven women, convinced Steinem women badly need social and political equality.


Gloria Steinem attended [[Waite High School (Toledo, Ohio)|Waite High School]] in Toledo, then graduated from Western High School in [[Washington, D.C.]] She attended [[Smith College]], where she remains active.
Gloria Steinem attended [[Waite High School (Toledo, Ohio)|Waite High School]] in Toledo, then graduated from Western High School in [[Washington, D.C.]] She attended [[Smith College]], where she remains active.
.


==Political awakening and activism ==
==Political awakening and activism ==
Line 53: Line 54:


The cover of Harper's that month read, "Womanlike, they did not want to get tough with their man, and so, womanlike, they got screwed."?<ref>Harper's Magazine 1972.</ref>
The cover of Harper's that month read, "Womanlike, they did not want to get tough with their man, and so, womanlike, they got screwed."?<ref>Harper's Magazine 1972.</ref>

==Feminist Positions==
Steinem's social and political views overlap into multiple schools of feminism. This problem is compounded by the evolution of her views over five decades of activism. Althought most frequently considered a [[liberal feminist]], Steinem herself has repeatedly characterized herself as a [[radical feminist]]. More importantly, she has repudiated categorization within feminism as "nonconstructive to specific problems. I've turned up in every category. So it makes it harder for me to take the divisions with great seriousness."<ref>Interviewed By Cynthia Gorney: [http://www.motherjones.com/news/qa/1995/11/gorney.html/ ''Mother Jones'']</ref> Nevertheless, on concrete issues, Steinem has staked firm positions.

;Abortion
Steinem is a staunch advocate of reproductive freedom, a term she herself coined and helped popularize. She credits an [[abortion]] hearing she covered for [[New York Magazine]] as the event that turned her into an activist.<ref>[http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2006/01/22/sunday/main1227391.shtml/ ''CBS News'']</ref> At the time, abortions were widely illegal risky. In [[2005]], Steinem appeared in the documentary film, ''I Had an Abortion'', by Jennifer Baumgardner and Gillian Aldrich. In the film, Steinem described the [[abortion]] she had as a young woman in [[London]], where she lived briefly before studying in [[India]]. In the documentary ''My Feminism'', Steinem characterized her abortion as a "pivotal and contructive experience."

;Pornography
Along with [[Susan Brownmiller]], [[Andrea Dworkin]], and [[Catherine MacKinnon]], Steinem has been a vehement critic [[pornography]], which she distinguishes from [[erotica]]: "Erotica is as different from pornography as love is from rape, as dignity is from humiliation, as partnership is from slavery, as pleasure is from pain."<ref>''Erotica and Pornography: A Clear and Present Difference''. Ms. Magazine. November 1978, pp. 53. & ''Pornography--Not Sex but the Oscene Use of Power.'' Ms. Magazine. August 1977, 43. Also available ''Outgrageous Acts'', pp. 219.</ref> Steinem's argument hinges on the distinction between reciprocity versus domination. She writes, "Blatant or subtle, pornography involves no equal power or mutuality. In fact, much of the tension and drama comes from the clear idea that one person is dominating the other." Confronted with the problem of same-sex pornography, Steinem asserts, "Whatever the gender of the participants, all pornography is an imitation of the male-female, conqueror-victim paradigm, and almost all of it actually portrays ir implies enslaves women and master." Steinem also cites "[[snuff films]]" as a serious threat to women.

[[Sex-positive feminists]] adamently reject Steinem's position. Feminist [[Camille Paglia]] writes, "Our knowledge of fantasies is expanded by pornography, which is why pornography should be tolerated...The imagination cannot and must not be policed. Pornography cannot be separated from art; the two interpenetrate each other."<ref>Paglia, Camille. ''Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson.'' New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, 1990. pp. 24.</ref> Paglia elsewhere said of Steinem, "She was out there, never having read a word of what I’d written, comparing me to [[Hitler]], comparing [[Sexual Personae]] to [[Mein Kampf]]. This is a level of ineptitude and evil–-and I’m not kidding, evil--from these women who lie, lie, lie."<ref>[http://www.divamag.co.uk/diva/features.asp?AID=1918/ ''DIVA Lesbian Magazine'']</ref>

;Female Genital Mutilation
Steinem wrote the definitive article on [[female genital cutting]] that brought the practice into the American public's consciousness.<ref>"The International Crime of Female Genital Mutilation." ''Ms. Magazine'', March 1979, pp. 65. Also Available ''Outrageous Acts'', pp. 292.</ref> In it she exposes the staggering "75 million women suffering with the results of genital mutilation." According to Steinem, "The real reasons for genital mutilation can only be understood in the context of the patriarchy: men must control women's bodies as the means of production, and thus repress the independent power of women's sexuality."


== More recent life ==
== More recent life ==
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On [[September 3]], [[2000]], at age [[66]], she married [[David Bale]], father of actor [[Christian Bale]]. The wedding was performed at the home of her friend [[Wilma Mankiller]], formerly the first female [[Tribal chief|Chief]] of the [[Cherokee Nation]]. Steinem and Bale were married for only three years before he died of brain [[lymphoma]] on [[December 30]], [[2003]], at age 62.
On [[September 3]], [[2000]], at age [[66]], she married [[David Bale]], father of actor [[Christian Bale]]. The wedding was performed at the home of her friend [[Wilma Mankiller]], formerly the first female [[Tribal chief|Chief]] of the [[Cherokee Nation]]. Steinem and Bale were married for only three years before he died of brain [[lymphoma]] on [[December 30]], [[2003]], at age 62.


In [[2005]], Steinem appeared in the documentary film, ''I Had an Abortion'', by Jennifer Baumgardner and Gillian Aldrich. In the film, Steinem described the [[abortion]] she had as a young woman in [[London]], where she lived briefly before studying in [[India]]. Steinem was also a member of [[Democratic Socialists of America]], and an advisory board member of [[Women's Voices. Women Vote]].
Steinem was also a member of [[Democratic Socialists of America]], and an advisory board member of [[Women's Voices. Women Vote]].

In May [[2007]], she was the commencement speaker at [[Smith College]] - her alma mater.


Canadian singer-songwriter [[David Usher]] penned a song titled "Love Will Save The Day," which includes sound bytes from Steinem speeches. The song's opening contains her statement, "It really is a revolution," and the ending breaks for the quote, "We are talking about a society in which there will be no roles other than those chosen or those earned; we are really talking about humanism." In the credits of the movie ''[[V for Vendetta]]'', this last speech is also quoted.
Canadian singer-songwriter [[David Usher]] penned a song titled "Love Will Save The Day," which includes sound bytes from Steinem speeches. The song's opening contains her statement, "It really is a revolution," and the ending breaks for the quote, "We are talking about a society in which there will be no roles other than those chosen or those earned; we are really talking about humanism." In the credits of the movie ''[[V for Vendetta]]'', this last speech is also quoted.


Steinem has been an active political participant in the 2008 election. She made headlines for a [[New York Times]] op-ed in which she called [[gender]] "probably the most restricting force in an American life," rather than race. She elaborated, "Black men were given the vote a half-century before women of any race were allowed to mark a ballot, and generally have ascended to positions of power, from the military to the boardroom, before any women."<ref>Steinem, Gloria. New York Times: [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/08/opinion/08steinem.html?_r=1/ ''Women are Never the Front-runners'']</ref>
Steinem has been an active political participant in the 2008 election. She made headlines for a [[New York Times]] op-ed in which she called [[gender]] "probably the most restricting force in an American life," rather than race. She elaborated, "Black men were given the vote a half-century before women of any race were allowed to mark a ballot, and generally have ascended to positions of power, from the military to the boardroom, before any women."<ref>Steinem, Gloria. New York Times: [http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/08/opinion/08steinem.html?_r=1/ ''Women are Never the Front-runners'']</ref>

== Criticism ==

Steinem has enjoyed widespread recognition in the US, and so has been a popular target for those [[antifeminism|critical of feminism]] generally. Within the feminist movement she has been criticized by [[radical feminists]] for what is seen as a [[liberal]] approach that makes too many concessions to [[patriarchy]] -- notably, her [http://www.nytimes.com/1976/07/04/books/friedan-changed.html involvement] with the [[Operation Mockingbird|CIA]] was exposed in 1975 by the the left-wing [[Redstockings]]. More recently, Gloria Steinem's marriage in September 2000 caused some controversy among feminists as Steinem had been a long time critic of the institution of marriage. Her late husband, [[David Bale]], faced deportation charges for overstaying his visa, but his marriage to Steinem earned him conditional residency.


==List of works==
==List of works==

Revision as of 04:06, 11 March 2008

Gloria Steinem
Born
Gloria Steinem
Occupation(s)Feminist, Journalist
Spouse(s)David Bale
(2000 ─ 2003)

Gloria Marie Steinem (born March 25, 1934) is an American feminist icon, journalist and women's rights advocate. She is the founder and original publisher of Ms. magazine, and was an influential co-convener of the National Women's Political Caucus.

Early life

Steinem was born in Toledo, Ohio. Her mother, Ruth Nuneviller, was of part German descent. Her Jewish-American father, Leo Steinem, was a traveling antiques dealer (with trailer and family in tow) and the son of immigrants from Germany and Poland.[1] The family split in 1944, when he went to California to find work while Gloria lived with her mother in Toledo. As a child in Toledo, she cared for her ill mother and helped support the family along with her sister Susanne.

Years later, Steinem described her relationship to her mother as pivotal to understanding of social injustices. At 34, Ruth Steinem had a "nervous breakdown" that left her invalid, trapped in delusional fantasies that occasionally turned violent.[2] She changed "from an energetic, fun-loving, book-loving" woman into "someone who was afraid to be alone, who could not hang on to reality long enough to hold a job, and who could rarely concentrate long enough to read a book." Ruth spent months in-and-out of sanatoriums for the mentally disabled. Before her illness, Ruth had graduated with honors from Oberlin College, worked her way up to newspaper editor, and even taught a year of calculus at the college level. Steinem's father, however, demanded that her mother relinquish her career, and divorced her after she became sick. The subsequent apathy of doctors, along with the social punishments for career-driven women, convinced Steinem women badly need social and political equality.

Gloria Steinem attended Waite High School in Toledo, then graduated from Western High School in Washington, D.C. She attended Smith College, where she remains active.

Political awakening and activism

Gloria Steinem at news conference, Women's Action Alliance, January 12, 1972

In 1963 she was employed as a Playboy Bunny at the New York Playboy Club to research an article that exposed how women were treated at the clubs. The article was a sensation, making Steinem an in-demand writer in the process.

After conducting a series of celebrity interviews, Steinem eventually got a political assignment covering George McGovern's presidential campaign, which led to a position in a New York magazine. Her 1962 article in Esquire magazine about the way in which women are forced to choose between a career and marriage preceded Betty Friedan's book The Feminine Mystique by one year. She became politically active in the feminist movement, and the media seemed to appoint Steinem as a feminist leader of sorts. Steinem brought other notable feminists to the fore and toured the country with lawyer Florynce Rae "Flo" Kennedy, and in 1971, cofounded the National Women's Political Caucus as well as the Women's Action Alliance.

In 1972, she co-founded the feminist-themed Ms. magazine . When the first regular issue hit the newsstands in July 1972, its 300,000 "one-shot" test copies sold out nationwide in eight days. It generated an astonishing 26,000 subscription orders and over 20,000 reader letters within weeks. Steinem would continue to write for the magazine until it was sold in 1987. The magazine changed hands again in 2001, to the Feminist Majority Foundation; Steinem remains on the masthead as one of six founding editors, and serves on the advisory board.[3]

Steinem cofounded the Coalition of Labor Union Women in 1974, and participated in the National Conference of Women in Houston, Texas in 1977. She became Ms. magazine's consulting editor when it was revived in 1991, and she was inducted into the National Women's Hall of Fame in 1993. In 1991, Steinem founded Choice USA.

Contrary to popular belief, Steinem did not coin the feminist slogan "A woman needs a man like a fish needs a bicycle." The phrase is actually attributable to Irina Dunn.

Political Campaigns

In contrast to many prominent leaders of the feminist second-wave like Germaine Greer, Kate Millett, and Shulamith Firestone, Steinem was an influential player in the legislative and political arenas. Her involvement in presidential campaigns stretches back to her support of Adlai Stevenson in 1952.

1968 Election

A proponent of civil rights and fierce critic of the war in Vietnam, Steinem was initially drawn to Senator Eugene McCarthy for of his "admirable record" on those issues. But in meeting and hearing him speak, she found him "cautious, uninspired, and dry." Interviewing him for New York Magazine, she called his answers a "fiaso," noting that he gave "not one spontaneous reply." As the campaign progressed, Steinem became baffled at "personally vicious" attacks that McCarthy leveled against his primary opponent Robert Kennedy, even as "his real opponent, Hubert Humphrey, went free."

On a late night radio show, Steinem garnered attention for declaring, "George McGovern is the real Eugene McCarthy."[4] Steinem had met McGovern in 1963 on the way to an economic conference organized by John Kenneth Galbraith, and had been impressed by his unpretentious manner and genuine consideration of her opinions. Five years later in 1968, Steinem was chosen to pitch the arguments to McGovern as to why he should enter the presidential race that year. He agreed, and Steinem "consecutively or simulataneously served as pamphlet writer, advance "man," fund raiser, lobbyist of delegates, errand runner, and press secretary."

McGovern lost the nomination in the infamous 1968 Democratic Convention. Steinem gave McGovern credit for standing on the platform with Humphrey in a show of unity after Humphrey had clenched the nomination, whereas McCarthy refused the same gesture. She later wrote of her astonishment at Humphrey's "refusal even to suggest to Chicago Mayor Daley that he control the rampaging police and the bloodshed in the streets."[5]

1972 Election

By the 1972 election, the women's movement was rapidly expanding its political power. Steinem, along with Congresswommen Shirley Chisholm and Bella Abzug, had founded the National Women's Political Caucus in July of 1971.[6]

Nevertheless, Steinem was reluctant to re-join the McGovern campaign. Though she had brought in McGovern's single largest campaign contributor in 1968, she "still had been treated like a frivolous pariah by much of McGovern's campaign staff." And in April 1972, Steinem remarked that he "still doesn't understand the women's movement."

McGovern ultimately excised the abortion issue from the party's platform. (Recent publications show McGovern was deeply conflicted on the issue.[7].) Actress and activist Shirley MacLaine, though privately supporting abortion rights, urged the delegates to vote against the plank. Steinem later wrote this description of the events:

The concensus of the meeting of women delegates held by the caucus had been to fight for the minority plank on reproductive freedom; indeed our vote had supported the plank nine to one. So fight we did, with three women delegates speaking eloquently in its favor as a constitutional right. One male Right-to-Life zealot spoke against, and Shirley MacLaine also was an opposition speaker, on the grounds that this was a fundamental right but didn't belong in the platform. We made a good showing. Clearly we would have won if McGovern's forces had left their delegates uninstructed and thus able to vote their consciences.[8]

Germaine Greer flatly contradicted Steinem's account. Having recently gained public notoriety for her feminist manifesto The Female Eunuch and sparrings with Norman Mailer, Greer was commisioned to cover the convention for Harper's Magazine. Greer criticized Steinem's "controlled jubilation" that 38% of the delegates were women, ignoring that "many delegations had merely stacked themselves with token females...The McGovern machine had already pulled the rug out from under them."

Greer leveled her most searing critique on Steinem for her capitulation on abortion rights. Greer reported, "Jacqui Ceballos called from the crowd to demand abortion rights on the Democratic platform, but Bella [Abzug] and Gloria stared glassily out into the room," thus killing the abortion rights platform. Greer asks, "Why had Bella and Gloria not helped Jacqui to nail him on abortion? What reticence, what loserism had afflicted them?"

The cover of Harper's that month read, "Womanlike, they did not want to get tough with their man, and so, womanlike, they got screwed."?[9]

Feminist Positions

Steinem's social and political views overlap into multiple schools of feminism. This problem is compounded by the evolution of her views over five decades of activism. Althought most frequently considered a liberal feminist, Steinem herself has repeatedly characterized herself as a radical feminist. More importantly, she has repudiated categorization within feminism as "nonconstructive to specific problems. I've turned up in every category. So it makes it harder for me to take the divisions with great seriousness."[10] Nevertheless, on concrete issues, Steinem has staked firm positions.

Abortion

Steinem is a staunch advocate of reproductive freedom, a term she herself coined and helped popularize. She credits an abortion hearing she covered for New York Magazine as the event that turned her into an activist.[11] At the time, abortions were widely illegal risky. In 2005, Steinem appeared in the documentary film, I Had an Abortion, by Jennifer Baumgardner and Gillian Aldrich. In the film, Steinem described the abortion she had as a young woman in London, where she lived briefly before studying in India. In the documentary My Feminism, Steinem characterized her abortion as a "pivotal and contructive experience."

Pornography

Along with Susan Brownmiller, Andrea Dworkin, and Catherine MacKinnon, Steinem has been a vehement critic pornography, which she distinguishes from erotica: "Erotica is as different from pornography as love is from rape, as dignity is from humiliation, as partnership is from slavery, as pleasure is from pain."[12] Steinem's argument hinges on the distinction between reciprocity versus domination. She writes, "Blatant or subtle, pornography involves no equal power or mutuality. In fact, much of the tension and drama comes from the clear idea that one person is dominating the other." Confronted with the problem of same-sex pornography, Steinem asserts, "Whatever the gender of the participants, all pornography is an imitation of the male-female, conqueror-victim paradigm, and almost all of it actually portrays ir implies enslaves women and master." Steinem also cites "snuff films" as a serious threat to women.

Sex-positive feminists adamently reject Steinem's position. Feminist Camille Paglia writes, "Our knowledge of fantasies is expanded by pornography, which is why pornography should be tolerated...The imagination cannot and must not be policed. Pornography cannot be separated from art; the two interpenetrate each other."[13] Paglia elsewhere said of Steinem, "She was out there, never having read a word of what I’d written, comparing me to Hitler, comparing Sexual Personae to Mein Kampf. This is a level of ineptitude and evil–-and I’m not kidding, evil--from these women who lie, lie, lie."[14]

Female Genital Mutilation

Steinem wrote the definitive article on female genital cutting that brought the practice into the American public's consciousness.[15] In it she exposes the staggering "75 million women suffering with the results of genital mutilation." According to Steinem, "The real reasons for genital mutilation can only be understood in the context of the patriarchy: men must control women's bodies as the means of production, and thus repress the independent power of women's sexuality."

More recent life

In the 1980s and 1990s, Steinem had to deal with a number of personal setbacks, including the diagnoses of breast cancer in 1986[16] and trigeminal neuralgia in 1994.

According to two Frontline features (aired in 1995) and Ms. magazine, Steinem became an advocate for children she believed had been sexually abused by caretakers in day care centers (such as the McMartin preschool case).[17][18][19]

In a 1998 press interview, Steinem weighed in on the Clinton impeachment hearings when asked whether President Bill Clinton should be impeached for lying under oath, she was quoted as saying, "Clinton should be censured for lying under oath about Lewinsky in the Paula Jones deposition, perhaps also for stupidity in answering at all." [20]

On September 3, 2000, at age 66, she married David Bale, father of actor Christian Bale. The wedding was performed at the home of her friend Wilma Mankiller, formerly the first female Chief of the Cherokee Nation. Steinem and Bale were married for only three years before he died of brain lymphoma on December 30, 2003, at age 62.

Steinem was also a member of Democratic Socialists of America, and an advisory board member of Women's Voices. Women Vote.

Canadian singer-songwriter David Usher penned a song titled "Love Will Save The Day," which includes sound bytes from Steinem speeches. The song's opening contains her statement, "It really is a revolution," and the ending breaks for the quote, "We are talking about a society in which there will be no roles other than those chosen or those earned; we are really talking about humanism." In the credits of the movie V for Vendetta, this last speech is also quoted.

Steinem has been an active political participant in the 2008 election. She made headlines for a New York Times op-ed in which she called gender "probably the most restricting force in an American life," rather than race. She elaborated, "Black men were given the vote a half-century before women of any race were allowed to mark a ballot, and generally have ascended to positions of power, from the military to the boardroom, before any women."[21]

List of works

  • The Thousand Indias (1957)
  • The Beach Book (1963)
  • Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions (1983)
  • Marilyn: Norma Jean (1986)
  • Revolution from Within (1992)
  • Moving beyond Words (1993)

Quotes

  • "Evil is obvious only in retrospect."
  • "The first problem for all of us, men and women, is not to learn but to unlearn."

Biography

  • The Education of A Woman: The Life and Times of Gloria Steinem by Carolyn Heilbrun 1995

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ http://www.wargs.com/other/steinem.html
  2. ^ Steinem, Glora. Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions. New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1984. pp. 129-138.
  3. ^ Ms. Magazine History
  4. ^ Miroff, Bruce. The Liberals' Moment: The McGovern Insurgency and the Identity Crisis of the Democratic Party. University Press of Kansas, 2007. pp. 206
  5. ^ Steinem, Gloria. Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions. New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1984. pp. 71-97.
  6. ^ Miroff. pp. 205.
  7. ^ Miroff. pp. 207.
  8. ^ Steinem, Gloria. Outrageous Acts and Everyday Rebellions. New York: Henry Holt & Co., 1984. pp. 100-110.
  9. ^ Harper's Magazine 1972.
  10. ^ Interviewed By Cynthia Gorney: Mother Jones
  11. ^ CBS News
  12. ^ Erotica and Pornography: A Clear and Present Difference. Ms. Magazine. November 1978, pp. 53. & Pornography--Not Sex but the Oscene Use of Power. Ms. Magazine. August 1977, 43. Also available Outgrageous Acts, pp. 219.
  13. ^ Paglia, Camille. Sexual Personae: Art and Decadence from Nefertiti to Emily Dickinson. New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press, 1990. pp. 24.
  14. ^ DIVA Lesbian Magazine
  15. ^ "The International Crime of Female Genital Mutilation." Ms. Magazine, March 1979, pp. 65. Also Available Outrageous Acts, pp. 292.
  16. ^ [1]
  17. ^ [2]
  18. ^ [3]
  19. ^ [4]
  20. ^ "Steinem Wants Clinton Censured, Not Impeached". Reuters: September 28, 1998. Retrieved 2007-06-08.
  21. ^ Steinem, Gloria. New York Times: Women are Never the Front-runners

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