At the March 2016 ‘Intersections in History’ Conference, eminent feminist historian Professor Patricia Grimshaw recounted the origins of the Australian Women’s History Network (AWHN). The AWHN ‘helped start a conversation’ with the Australian Historical Association (AHA)‘about [the] representation of women in Ph.D. programs and lecturing’, Grimshaw asserted; it perhaps even forced the AHA to ‘consider gender politics in academia’. Access to these enlightening recollections was made possible not through participants’ memory of the conference held at the Queen Victoria Women’s Centre in Melbourne, but through the documentation of the conference on Twitter. Both Lilith: A Feminist History Journal and the AWHN are becoming more engaged with new...
Introduction to Special Issue that engages with the increasingly important, separate yet interrelate...
Herstoriographies: The Feminist Print Matters explores the relationship between past and present, se...
Copyright © 2007 Taylor & FrancisIn 2003 Australian feminist historian Jill Matthews declared that w...
Women have historically played a significant role in shaping media output, both as producers or cont...
Similar to feminist historians around the globe, over the past few years I have watched on with alte...
The articles in this Special Issue are drawn from some of the contributions to a conference held at ...
In the four decades since the rise of what has become termed the second wave and through the course ...
This is a double issue and we hope you will feel that it was worth the wait. It carries reports of g...
This article charts the establishment of the UK Association of Art Historians and its publishing org...
For this Special Issue of Studies in the Maternal, we are drawing together a wide range of papers pr...
The edited volume, Feminist Histories and Digital Media, sets out to explore the ways in which the f...
Editorial: Feminist Encounters General Issue: with Theme of Gender and Embodiment in Narratives of D...
Just a year ago the Women\u27s Studies Newsletter announced the founding of the National Women\u27s ...
Feminism is a long established, often neglected empirical and theoretical presence in the study of o...
During the 2022 Sociological Association of Aotearoa New Zealand (SAANZ) annual meeting, Terina Kair...
Introduction to Special Issue that engages with the increasingly important, separate yet interrelate...
Herstoriographies: The Feminist Print Matters explores the relationship between past and present, se...
Copyright © 2007 Taylor & FrancisIn 2003 Australian feminist historian Jill Matthews declared that w...
Women have historically played a significant role in shaping media output, both as producers or cont...
Similar to feminist historians around the globe, over the past few years I have watched on with alte...
The articles in this Special Issue are drawn from some of the contributions to a conference held at ...
In the four decades since the rise of what has become termed the second wave and through the course ...
This is a double issue and we hope you will feel that it was worth the wait. It carries reports of g...
This article charts the establishment of the UK Association of Art Historians and its publishing org...
For this Special Issue of Studies in the Maternal, we are drawing together a wide range of papers pr...
The edited volume, Feminist Histories and Digital Media, sets out to explore the ways in which the f...
Editorial: Feminist Encounters General Issue: with Theme of Gender and Embodiment in Narratives of D...
Just a year ago the Women\u27s Studies Newsletter announced the founding of the National Women\u27s ...
Feminism is a long established, often neglected empirical and theoretical presence in the study of o...
During the 2022 Sociological Association of Aotearoa New Zealand (SAANZ) annual meeting, Terina Kair...
Introduction to Special Issue that engages with the increasingly important, separate yet interrelate...
Herstoriographies: The Feminist Print Matters explores the relationship between past and present, se...
Copyright © 2007 Taylor & FrancisIn 2003 Australian feminist historian Jill Matthews declared that w...