Oral History Interview included the change, purpose, and population of women\u27s studies program over time. Also, the role of gender in feminism, women movement, and liberal perspectives. Media representation of women and women right
Part of a series of interviews conducted for the Feminist Oral History Project during 1993 by Marli ...
The Global Feminisms Project (https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/globalfeminisms/) is a collaborative inter...
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) remains cloaked in mystery and stereotypes especially when it pert...
In spring term 2015, four OSU Women's Center staff members gathered for an oral history interview to...
Since feminist historians largely concur that traditional documentation ignores, obscures, and disto...
The Global Feminisms Project (http://www.umich.edu/~glblfem/en/index.html) is a collaborative intern...
In her 2015 interview, Nancy Worcester discusses her experiences as a professor in the Gender and Wo...
A personal statement written for tbe program at tbe University of Minnesota and presented at a brown...
Women’s history and oral history grew up together. Each developed from a commitment to reveal and re...
Women’s history and oral history grew up together. Each developed from a commitment to reveal and re...
Jennifer Thomson, assistant professor of History at Bucknell University, interviews Dorothy Sue Cobb...
The Global Feminisms Project (http://www.umich.edu/~glblfem/en/index.html) is a collaborative intern...
As a new member of NWSA, I was unprepared for but delighted by the number and quality of the lesbian...
With the recent revival of women's liberation movements, woman's place in American society and the "...
The Global Feminisms Project (http://www.umich.edu/~glblfem/en/index.html) is a collaborative intern...
Part of a series of interviews conducted for the Feminist Oral History Project during 1993 by Marli ...
The Global Feminisms Project (https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/globalfeminisms/) is a collaborative inter...
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) remains cloaked in mystery and stereotypes especially when it pert...
In spring term 2015, four OSU Women's Center staff members gathered for an oral history interview to...
Since feminist historians largely concur that traditional documentation ignores, obscures, and disto...
The Global Feminisms Project (http://www.umich.edu/~glblfem/en/index.html) is a collaborative intern...
In her 2015 interview, Nancy Worcester discusses her experiences as a professor in the Gender and Wo...
A personal statement written for tbe program at tbe University of Minnesota and presented at a brown...
Women’s history and oral history grew up together. Each developed from a commitment to reveal and re...
Women’s history and oral history grew up together. Each developed from a commitment to reveal and re...
Jennifer Thomson, assistant professor of History at Bucknell University, interviews Dorothy Sue Cobb...
The Global Feminisms Project (http://www.umich.edu/~glblfem/en/index.html) is a collaborative intern...
As a new member of NWSA, I was unprepared for but delighted by the number and quality of the lesbian...
With the recent revival of women's liberation movements, woman's place in American society and the "...
The Global Feminisms Project (http://www.umich.edu/~glblfem/en/index.html) is a collaborative intern...
Part of a series of interviews conducted for the Feminist Oral History Project during 1993 by Marli ...
The Global Feminisms Project (https://sites.lsa.umich.edu/globalfeminisms/) is a collaborative inter...
The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia (KSA) remains cloaked in mystery and stereotypes especially when it pert...