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Women's studies
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Women's studies is an interdisciplinary academic field devoted to topics concerning women, feminism, gender, and politics. It often includes feminist theory, women's history (e.g. a history of women's suffrage) and social history, women's fiction, women's health, and the feminist and gender studies-influenced practice of most of the humanities and social sciences.
Contents
- 1 History
- 2 Current courses in women's studies
- 3 Criticism of Women's studies
- 4 Further reading
- 5 See also
- 6 References
- 7 External links
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History
Women's studies was first conceived as an academic rubric apart from other departments in the late 1960s, as the second wave of feminism gained political influence in the academy through student and faculty activism. As an academic discipline, it was modeled on the American studies and ethnic studies (such as Afro-American studies) and Chicano Studies programs that had arisen shortly before it. The first Women's Studies Program in the United States was established on May 21, 1970 at San Diego State College after a year of intense organizing of women's consciousness raising groups, rallies, petition circulating, and operating unofficial or experimental classes and presentations before seven committees and assemblies.[1] Carol Rowell Council was the student co-founder along with Dr. Joyce Nower, a literature instructor. A second program followed within weeks at Richmond College of the City University of New York (now the College of Staten Island). In the 1970s many universities and colleges created departments and programs in women's studies, and professorships became available in the field which did not require the sponsorship of other departments.
Current courses in women's studies
Women's studies courses are available at many universities and colleges around the world. Many universities that offer degrees in Women’s Studies offer classes in Gender Issues, Women and Religion, Female Sexuality, and Sex Crimes. Many also include with their program an option for gay/lesbian studies. In 2006, the Artemis Guide to Women's Studies
[2] provides a listing of 395 programs in the
United States, but may be out of date. Courses in the
United Kingdom can be found through the
Universities and Colleges Admissions Service[3].
Criticism of Women's studies
Also see Criticisms of women's studies
The ties between the women's studies discipline and the feminist political movement have inspired criticism, both of the perceived political nature of the discipline itself, and relatedly of the quality and nature of the scholarship and pedagogy within women's studies departments.[opinion needs balancing] See, e.g., Camille Paglia, Christina Hoff-Sommers, Phyllis Chesler, Karen Lerhman, Daphne Patai, and Koertge.[citation needed] Critics have also charged that the discipline has discouraged, rather than encouraged, internal criticism and critical thinking; been systematically biased in favor of female and against male scholarship; employed questionable methodologies and promoted scholarship based on politics rather than merit.[citation needed] Women's studies academicians respond, in part, that as in all academic fields, scholarly and pedagogical methods vary across individuals, institutions, and schools of thought.[citation needed] In response to the charge of anti-male discrimination, they point out that a significant amount of the valuable scholarship done on women's history, feminist philosophy, and the feminist movement, has been done by women, thus explaining any apparent discrimination.[citation needed]
Criticism has also arisen from within various schools of feminism itself, including allegations that academic women's studies has been too tied to a middle-class white American feminist movement; that is has become too theoretical and dissociated from the realities of women's lives; and that it favors a "victimization" reading of sexism over an "empowerment" model. Implicit criticisms of women's studies have sometimes been read from the development of
queer studies,
gender studies, and broader interdisciplinary forms of cultural studies that seek to integrate
anti-racist,
post-colonial studies, and other cultural studies that examine power relations.
[citation needed] Women's studies academicians have responded in part by implicitly broadening their own curricular and research agendas, incorporating insights from "descendant" disciplines; and pointing out the tendencies and roots within women's studies that already incorporate these other analyses.
[citation needed]
Further reading
- An Introduction to Women's Studies: Gender in a Transnational World, Inderpal Grewal, Caren Kaplan, ISBN 0-07-109380-X
- Exploring Women's Studies: Looking Forward, Looking Back, Carol R. Berkin, Judith L. Pinch, Carol Appel, 2005, ISBN 0-13-185088-1
- Issues In Feminism: An Introduction to Women's Studies, Sheila Ruth, 2000, ISBN 0-7674-1644-9
- Professing Feminism: Cautionary Tales from the Strange World of Women's Studies; Daphne Patai and Noretta Koertge, 1995, ISBN 0-465-09827-4
- Florence Howe (ed), Mari Jo Buhle (introduction), The Politics of Women's Studies: Testimony from Thirty Founding Mothers, Paperback edition, New York: Feminist Press 2001
- Gabriele Griffin and Rosi Braidotti (eds.), Thinking differently : a reader in European women's studies, London etc. : Zed Books, 2002
- Ellen Messer-Davidow: Disciplining feminism : from social activism to academic discourse, Durham, NC etc. : Duke University Press, 2002
See also
References
- ^ SDSU Women's Studies Department
- ^ Artemis Guide to Women's Studies in the U.S.
- ^ Universities and Colleges Admissions Service, United Kingdom