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Cheryl Lindsey Seelhoff (birth year - ) is the former editor of Gentle Spirit magazine,[1] a homeschooling and homesteading magazine, published between 1989 and 2001, that reached a readership of approximately 35,000 before being forced from the marketplace in a well-publicized anti-trust lawsuit, Seelhoff v. Welch. Seelhoff's high profile in Christian homeschooling, and the details of the case which was decided in Seelhoff's favor, was closely watched by the U.S. homeschooling movement as a battle for its control between conservative Christian and independent homeschoolers.[2][3]. A former ardent Quiverfull proponent and birth-mother of eleven children, she has since divorced her husband and become an article writer, and under the pseudonym "Heart" a highly read blogger, devoted to radical feminist causes.[4] [5] [6].

Homeschool Anti-Trust lawsuit

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In 1997, Seelhoff filed an antitrust lawsuit against eight conservative Christian individuals and organizations, including competing homeschooling guru Mary Pride, represented with the assistance of the Home School Legal Defense Association. The case went to trial in September 1998 and a unanimous jury found in Seelhoff's favor, awarding her in excess of $1 million (Pride herself settled out-of court). The lawsuit has come to be known in the homeschooling community as the "Homeschooling's Anti-Trust Case."[7]

Politics and philosophy

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In 2001 Seelhoff created a radical feminist[8] website and began writing and publishing feminist articles. In 2006 Seelhoff served as guest editor at the invitation of the collective of the feminist newsjournal Off Our Backs and has since written additional articles for Off Our Backs and other publications.[9]

References

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Bibliography

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--- Cheryl Lindsey Seelhoff (also known as Heart) is a radical feminist blogger and writer, and former editor of the homeschooling and homesteading magazine Gentle Spirit.

Homeschool Anti-Trust lawsuit

[edit]

In 1997, Seelhoff filed an antitrust lawsuit against eight conservative Christian individuals and organizations, including competing homeschooling guru Mary Pride, represented with the assistance of the Home School Legal Defense Association. The case went to trial in September 1998 and a unanimous jury found in Seelhoff's favor, awarding her in excess of $1 million (Pride herself settled out-of court). The lawsuit has come to be known in the homeschooling community as the "Homeschooling's Anti-Trust Case."[1][2][3][4]

Politics and philosophy

[edit]

In 2001 Seelhoff created a radical feminist[5] website and began writing and publishing feminist articles. In 2006 Seelhoff served as guest editor at the invitation of the collective of the feminist newsjournal Off Our Backs and has since written additional articles for Off Our Backs and other publications.[6]

References

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  1. ^ Home Education News, April 2004
  2. ^ Helen Cordes, "Battling for the Heart and Soul of Homeschoolers" in Salon Magazine, October 2, 2000.
  3. ^ Helen Hegener, "Homeschooling Freedoms at Risk," Home Education Magazine, March 5, 1996.
  4. ^ Cheryl Seelhoff, Who Stole Homeschooling, in The Link, Vol. 5, No. 2
  5. ^ The Margins
  6. ^ See,Confronting the Religious RightOff Our Backs, 7/1/06;Women in the Military: The Rape of the Hadji Girl, Off Our Backs, 4/1/06;Join Us! The Motherhood Revolution, Off Our Backs, 4/1/06; Motherhood as Revolution: Raising Bi-Racial Children, Off Our Backs, 1/1/06;Radical Feminism and the Politics of Pregnancy and Birth,Off Our Backs, 1/1/06

Bibliography

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