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Voices of Women Historians

The Personal, the Political, the Professional
Buch | Hardcover
320 Seiten
1999
Indiana University Press (Verlag)
978-0-253-33494-7 (ISBN)
41,15 inkl. MwSt
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Weaves together women's history, and women in the historical profession. This collection of essays describe how a group of women negotiated the competing demands of being a woman, a professional, and a political activist. It examines the influence of the modern women's liberation movement and various feminist philosophies on individual lives.
"Voices of Women Historians" weaves together past and present in women's history, and women in the historical profession. Recording the diverse paths taken to become historians, essays describe how a group of women negotiated the often competing demands of being a woman, a professional, and a political activist during the turbulent 1960s through the challenges of the 1990s. The Coordinating Council for Women in History evolved out of the arrival of a new cohort of women historians who turned their scholarly focus to the recovery of women's experiences. In so doing, they created and legitimated the field of women's history. The contributors to this volume, former CCWH officers, mark the thirtieth anniversary of the organisation while commemorating three decades of feminist activism and scholarship. But beyond the celebration of personal and professional progress, this collection contributes to the emerging historiography of women's history and the literature on women in the professions.
Essays examine the influence of the modern women's liberation movement and various feminist philosophies on individual lives and academic careers, demonstrating how history and activism were intertwined. Some women began by keeping their writing of history separate from anti-war or civil rights politics; for others the women's movement led them to women's history. Those who entered graduate school in the 1960s suffered from overt discrimination as mothers and as women. For some this was the push that catapulted them into the study of women. Some essays suggest that women academics have experienced a life cycle different from their male counterparts, with motherhood restricting, delaying, or transforming career paths. Contributors stand in dialogue with each other, sometimes recounting the same incident from different vantage points, sometimes disagreeing about the major trends in the field. Contributors represent three generations of women historians situated in different places within the academy and within the field of women's history, but all of them have dedicated themselves to women's history and women as historians.

Eileen Boris, Professor of Women's Studies at the University of Virginia and coordinating editor of IRIS: A Journal of Women, is the author of Art and Labor: Ruskin, Morris, and the Craftsman Ideal in America, and Home to Work: Motherhood and the Politics of Industrial Homework in the United States. She also has published numerous articles, essays and reviews in American Quarterly, Signs, Journal of American History, Women's Review of Books, and The Nation. Nupur Chaudhuri, who teaches at Texas Southern University, is the coeditor of Westerm Women and Imperialism: Complicity and Resistance, and coeditor of a special issue on "Gender, Race, Class, Sexuality: National and Global Perspectives" for the National Women's Studies Journal. She has written extensively on gender and imperialism and her articles have appeared in the Journal of Women's History, Women's History Review, and Victorian Studies.

Introduction: Standpoints on Hard Ground by Eileen Boris and Nupur Chaudhuri 1. Women among the Professors of History: The Story of a Process of Transformation by Gerda Lerner 2. Three Faces of Trevia: Identity, Activism and Intellect by Berenice A. Carroll 3. Regionalism, Feminism and Class: Conceiving the Field of Women's History by Hilda Smith 4. On the Importance of Taking Notes (and Keeping Them) by Linda K. Kerber 5. The Shaping of a Feminist Historian by Sandi E. Cooper 6. Making and Writing History Together by Renate Bridenthal 7. Going Against the Grain: The Making of an Independent Scholar by Karen Offen 8. Reassertion of Patriarchy at the End of the Twentieth Century by Joan Hoff 9. Bahupath Perie: The Long Trek by Nupur Chaudhuri 10. Two Catalysts in My Life: Voter Registration Drives and CCWHP by Mollie C. Davis 11. A Graduate Student's Odyssey by Frances Richardson Keller 12. "Drop by Drop the Bottle Fills" by Margaret Strobel 13. In Circles Comes Change by Eileen Boris 14. Domestic Constraints: Motherhood as Life and Subject by Lynn Y. Weiner 15. Activism and the Academy by Barbara Winslow 16. The Emma Thread: Communitarian Values, Global Visions by Nancy A. Hewitt 17. Clio on the Margins by Mary Elizabeth Perry 18. Que seyo: A Historian in Training by Nancy Mirabal 19. A New Generation of Women Historians by Crystal Feimster 20. Bibliography: Women Historians and How They Are Made by Barbara Penny Kanner

Erscheint lt. Verlag 22.9.1999
Zusatzinfo 20 b&w photos
Verlagsort Bloomington, IN
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 235 mm
Gewicht 735 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Geschichtstheorie / Historik
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Gender Studies
ISBN-10 0-253-33494-2 / 0253334942
ISBN-13 978-0-253-33494-7 / 9780253334947
Zustand Neuware
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