February 8, 2002
Revisiting the Early Days of the Women's-Studies Movement in Academe
THAT'S HERSTORICAL: The pioneering phase of women's studies was a smudgy era. Although a feminist sociologist or literary critic who wanted to reach her peers often found that established journals were less than welcoming, there was always one scholarly press close at hand -- namely, the departmental mimeograph machine. New models of gender circulated in single-spaced pages that were, at first, slightly moist to the touch. And the really committed activist-academic could run off some
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