Defining Feminism: A Comparative Historical Approach

This essay was conceived amid a contestation over the historical content of feminism at the 1976 Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, held at Bryn Mawr College. An earlier version circulated as Working Paper no. 22, Center for Research on Women (now the Institute for Research on Women and Gender), Stanford University (1985), under the title, “Toward a Historical Definition of Feminism: The Case of France.” I wish to thank many historian colleagues and the reviewers of Signs for their challenging comments, tips, and suggestions on previous drafts. I am also indebted to the Harvard University Center for European Studies; the Women’s Studies Seminar of the Huntington Library, San Marino, California, and San Diego State University, for inviting me to present these findings; and to Clemson University, for asking me to deliver the first Dorothy Lambert Whisnant Lecture on Women’s History. The article is dedicated to my colleagues in the Affiliated and Visiting Scholars’ group at the Institute for Research on Women and Gender.

Asset Type:Publications
Collection:Foreign Publications
Subject:Feminism, Historical approach, Cultural studies, Signs
Author:Karen Offen
Publisher:The University of Chicago Press
Publication Date:2012


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