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- W187007033 abstract "Thirty years after it was institutionalized in the U.S. academy, women's history now has a secure place in American higher education. The history of women's studies, however, remains mostly lost amid the politics that deny it legitimacy, both within and outside academic feminism. Philosopher Jane Roland Martin in her recent memoir declared, Had women in the 1970s been aware of the gendered underpinnings of the academy, let alone known how powerful and persistent our educationgender system is, the women's studies movement might never have been (109). How was it possible? What mixture of hope, energy, courage, and perhaps naivete can explain the success of the scattered and motley contingent of feminist activists, students, faculty, staff, and community supporters who launched and sustained the women's studies movement through its founding years? What conjuncture of developments in the history of higher education in the United States can account for its initial acceptance and rapid growth across the country in institutions of all kinds, defying predictions that it was just a fad? Where does women's studies fit into the larger story of American women's history? Does this tale offer any insight into possible futures for women's studies as an academic field? What can we learn from the history of women's studies? Is Martin right? I think not, for the generation of women who founded women's studies acted out of intellectual and emotional needs too powerful to repress, whatever the nature of the institutional beast we faced. (An early women's studies publication at San Diego State University bore the imprint Inside the Beast.) Women's studies developed at a particular period in the history of the United States, of American higher education, of feminism, and in the lives of women brought up to believe in the reality of the opportunities we were promised. To contextualize the beginnings of the academic feminist movement, it is useful to follow the scheme laid out by Florence Howe, Barbara Miller Solomon, and others, according to which women's studies can be viewed as a third phase in American women's struggle for equal access to higher education (Howe, Myths of Coeducation; Solomon). In the pre-Civil War era, women such as Lucy Stone demanded and some" @default.
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- W187007033 date "2016-01-01" @default.
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- W187007033 title "Women's Studies as Women's History" @default.
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