Syllabus 08/13/14

ECO 2011-L: POLITICAL ECONOMY OF WOMEN - CHRISTENSEN – FALL 2014 (08/26/14 version)

Lecture: Tuesday, Thursday 3:35 – 5:00 in Science 103. Group conferences: 5:15 – 6:15 in Science 201.

Office: Heimbold 304G, Email: kchristensen@slc.edu, Cell phone: (914)584-2340.

 

                               "The past isn't dead.  It isn't even past." (William Faulkner)

 

What determines the status of women in different societies and communities? What role is played by women’s labor (inside and outside of the home)? By cultural norms regarding sexuality and reproduction? By racial/ethnic identity? By religious traditions? After some brief theoretical grounding, this course will address these questions by examining the economic, political, social, and cultural histories of women in the various racial/ethnic groups that make up the US today.

 

REQUIRED TEXTS   All required and most recommended texts are on reserve in the library.

1. Articles posted on MySLC. (See schedule of assignments below.)

2. Amott, Teresa and Julie Mattheai, Race, Gender, and Work: A Multi-Cultural Economic History of Women in the U.S., 2nd ed., South End Press, 1999, ISBN 978-0896085374.

3. Kessler-Harris, Alice, Out to Work: A History of Wage-Earning Women in the US, Oxford Univ. Press, 2003. ISBN 978-0195157093. (Required sections will be posted on MySLC.)

4. Davis, Angela, Women, Race, and Class, 1983, Vintage. ISBN 978-0394713519.

5. Evans, Sara, Personal Politics: The Roots of Women’s Liberation in the Civil Rights Movement and the New Left, 1980, Vintage, ISBN 978-0394742281.

6. Stansell, Christine, The Feminist Promise: 1792 to the Present, Modern Library, 2011. ISBN 978-0812972023.

7. Hochschild, Arlie, The Second Shift: Working Families and the Revolution at Home, Penguin, 2012. ISBN 978-0143120339.

8. Cobble, Dorothy Sue, The Other Women’s Movement: Workplace Justice and Social Rights in Modern America, Princeton Univ. Press, 2004. ISBN 978-0691123684.

9. Eisenstein, Hester, Feminism Seduced, How Global Elites Use Women’s Labor and Ideas to Exploit the World, Paradigm Press, 2009. ISBN 978-1594516603.

 

Recommended Texts

1. Rosen, Ruth, The World Split Open: How the Modern Women’s Movement Changed America, Penguin, 2006, ISBN 978-0140097191. (If you do not have a background in the U.S. feminist movement, you may wish to buy this book to supplement Stansell.)

2. Ruiz, Vicki, Unequal Sisters: An Inclusive Reader in US Women’s History, Fourth edition, Routledge, 2007, ISBN 978-0415958417.

3. Lewis, Reina, and Sara Mills, Feminist Postcolonial Theory: A Reader, Routledge, 1999.

4. McCann, Carole, and Seung-Kyung Kim, Feminist Theory Reader: Local and Global Perspectives,

3rd. ed., Routledge, 2013. ISBN 978-0415521024.

5. Allen, Robert, Reluctant Reformers: Racism & Social Reform Movements in the US, Anchor Books, 1975.

6. Ehrenreich, Barbara & Arlie Hochschild, Global Women: Nannies, Maids & Sex Workers in the New Economy, Holt, 2004. ISBN 978-0805075090.

7. Karlsen, Carol, The Devil in the Shape of a Woman: Witchcraft in Colonial New England, W.W. Norton, 1998. ISBN 978-0393317596.

 

 

EXPECTATIONS and ASSIGNMENT

1. Attendance: Consistent attendance at lectures and group conferences is important. However, if you have a respiratory illness (cough, cold, etc.), please DO NOT come to class! Email me before class begins to be excused from attendance. If there is an assignment due that day, email it to me before class.

 

2. Review questions: After every lecture, I will send out review questions and a list of upcoming assignments. Please review these questions carefully; you do not need to write out the answers.

 

3. Academic freedom: I strive to maintain a classroom atmosphere where people can voice their opinions, questions, disagreements, and concerns. I have strong opinions about many of the topics we’ll be discussing. However, you will never be penalized (in terms of grades, evaluations, etc.) for disagreeing with me.

 

4. Academic integrity: Be careful to avoid committing plagiarism, the intentional or unintentional use of another’s words or ideas without proper attribution (citation, footnote, etc.). If you are confused about proper citation format, please ask!

 

5. Disabilities: If you have a physical, learning, or other disability that requires accommodation, please register with Associate Dean of Studies and Disability Services Polly Waldman and speak to me immediately. We will work together to make necessary accommodations.

 

6. Assignments: The primary assignments for this course will consist of a number of “review essays.” Although these will focus on the lecture material, you should include relevant material from the readings.

--Unless you are ill, submit stapled, double-spaced hard copies of all assignments. (If you are ill, email me your paper by the due date.)

--Timing of the assignments will depend on our progress in lecture. You will be given at least one week’s notice before a paper is due. No late papers will be accepted.

--If your paper contains an unacceptable number of grammatical/style errors, it may be returned for mandatory revision. You will have one week to revise; please submit the original paper with the revision.

 

 

SCHEDULE OF TOPICS AND ASSIGNMENTS

Readings will tend to “run ahead” of lectures. All required and many recommended articles are on MySLC.

 

I. Introduction; Conceptual framework for the course

What determines the status of women in a given society?

The role of: sex/gender systems, economic systems, racial/ethnic systems, religion and other variables.

 

READ: hooks, “Feminism: A Movement to End Sexist Oppression”

READ: Rich, “Towards a Politics of Location”

Skim: Mohanty, “Under Western Eyes, Revisited: Feminist Solidarity Through Anti-Capitalist Struggle” (Note: We will read Mohanty in more detail later.)

Rec: Hartsock, “The Feminist Standpoint”

 


II.A. Gender and Economics in the Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) Confederation

 

The relationship of Iroquois (Haudensaunee) women’s economic position to their social and political status

READ: Jensen, Joan, “Native American Women and Agriculture: A Seneca Case Study” from D/R, 1st ed.

READ: A/M Ch.3: “I Am the Fire of Time: American Indian Women”

READ: Brown, Judith, “Economic Organization and the Position of Women Among the Iroquois”

Ethnohistory 17, Summer/Fall 1970.

Rec: Perdue, Theda, “Cherokee Women and the Trail of Tears” from D/R

Further references on this topic are posted on MySLC.

 

The impact of Iroquois political/social structures on American colonial women

READ: Gunn Allen, Paula, “Who is Your Mother? The Red Roots of White Feminism” 2005

 

II. B. Gender and Sexuality in the Iroquois (Haudenosaunee) Confederation

 

“Berdache” (Two-Spirit People)

READ: (classic): Whitehead, Harriet, “The Bow and the Burden Strap: A New Look at Institutionalized Homosexuality in Native North America,” 1981.

READ: (classic): Blackwood, Evelyn, “Sexuality and Gender in Certain Native American Tribes: The Case of Cross-Gender Females,” 1984.

 

Highly Rec: Jacobs, Sue-Ellen, Wesley Thomas, and Sabine Lang, Two Spirit People: Native American Gender Identity, Sexuality, and Spirituality, Univ. of Illinois, 1997. (Anthology by Native Americans)

Rec: Callender, Charles and Lee Kochems, The North American Berdache,” Current Anthropology, 24(2), Aug-Oct. 1983. Data-rich article with rejoinders from a number of authors.

Rec: Roscoe, Will, Living in the Spirit: A Gay American Indian Anthology, St. Martin’s, 1988.

Rec: Williams, Walter. The Spirit & the Flesh: Sexual Diversity in American Indian Culture. Beacon, 1986.

 

 

III. White women in the colonial U.S. political economy

Petty commodity production and women’s unpaid labor

Economic systems, labor demand and fertility: The case of Puritan New England

 

READ: Kessler-Harris, “The Limits of Independence in the Colonial Economy,” (ch. 1 of Out to Work). .

READ: A/M 5: “Whatever Your Fight, Don't Be Ladylike: European American Women”

READ: Folbre, “Patriarchy in Colonial New England”

 

Rec: Ulrich, Laurel Thatcher, The Age of Homespun: Objects and Stories in the Creation of the American Myth, Knopf, 2002 and Good Wives: Image and Reality in the Lives of Women in Northern New England, 1650-1750, Knopf, 1982.

Rec: Demos, John, A Little Commonwealth: Family Life in Plymouth Colony, Oxford Univ. Press, 1970.

 

FIRST PAPER: Contrast the situation/status of women in the Iroquois Nations prior to the arrival of white colonists with that of Puritan women in the Massachusetts Bay Colony. Explain, in detail, the factors/ institutions that account for their disparate positions.

 

IV. African American women under slavery in the U.S. South

Ascendant industrial capitalism and US slavery; The triangular trade

Economic systems, labor demand, sexual violence and fertility: The case of the antebellum US South

The gendered division of labor under US slavery

 

READ: A/M 6: “We Specialize in the Wholly Impossible: African American Women”

READ: Davis, ch. 1, 2, 3.

READ: Grey-White, Deborah, “Female Slaves: Sex Roles & Status in the Plantation South,” D/R.

Rec: Jones, Jacqueline, A Dreadful Deceit: The Myth of Race from the Colonial Era to Obama’s America, Basic Books, 2013 and Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow, Basic Books, 1985.

Rec: Fredrickson, George, White Supremacy: A Comparative Study of American and South African History, Oxford Univ. Press, 1981 and Racism: A Short History, Princeton Univ. Press, 2002.

Rec: Rodney, Walter, How Europe Underdeveloped Africa, Howard Univ. Press, 1974.

Rec: Lincoln & Mamiya, The Black Church in the African American Experience, Duke Univ.Press, 1980.

Rec: Gutman, Herbert, The Black Family in Slavery and Freedom 1750-1925, Vintage Books, 1977.

Rec: Allen, Theodore, The Invention of the White Race, Verso Books, 1997.

 

 

V. White women in the transition to capitalism in New England: Salem witchcraft trials

De facto theocracy, gender roles, and economic change: The case of Salem

 

READ: Kessler-Harris, ch. 2 of Out to Work, “From Household Manufactures to Wage Work”

READ: Christensen, “’Double, Double, Toil and Trouble’: Women, Economic Development, and the Salem Witchcraft Trials of 1692,” Ch. 1 & 2, manuscript in progress.

Rec: Karlsen, Carol, The Devil in the Shape of a Woman: Witchcraft in Colonial New England, Norton.

Rec: Boyer, Nissenbaum, Salem Possessed: The Social & Economic Origins of Witchcraft, Harvard 1974.

Rec: Norton, Mary Beth, In the Devil’s Snare: The Salem Witchcraft Crisis of 1692, Knopf, 2002.

 

SECOND PAPER: Using lecture material and recommended readings, describe the context of, and the reasons for, the Salem witchcraft trials of 1692.

 

VI. White middle-class women and the cult of true womanhood

Industrialization and the creation of the “public/private split”

Commodification, superfluous labor and infantalization 

 

READ: Lerner, Gerda, “The Lady and the Mill Girl: Changes in the Status of Women in the Age of Jackson 1800-1840” from Cott & Pleck (eds.), A Heritage of Her Own.

READ: Welter, Barbara, “The Cult of True Womanhood 1820-1860” (classic article) and critiques by Rupp, Roberts, Hewitt, and Guy in Journal of Women’s History, Spring 2002. 

Rec: Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, The Yellow Wallpaper, (any edition)

Rec: Parker, Gail, The Oven Birds: American Women on Womanhood 1820-1920, Anchor, 1972.

Rec: Gordon, Linda, Heroes of Their Own Lives: Politics & History of Family Violence, Univ.Ill, 2002.

 

THIRD PAPER: Describe the relationship between the changes in white women’s economic position and their changing social roles in the early to mid-1800s.

VII. Black and white women in the abolitionist movement; The birth of the US women's movement 

The promise and betrayal of Reconstruction; The Equal Rights Association and its demise

 

READ: Davis, Ch. 4,7.

Rec: Aptheker, Bettina, Woman’s Legacy, Univ. of Mass./Amherst, 1981.

Rec: DuBois, W.E.B., Black Reconstruction in America 1860-1880, Atheneum, 1935.

Rec: Foner, Eric, Reconstruction 1863-1877, Harper & Row, original edition 1988.

Rec: Flexnor, Eleanor, Century of Struggle: The Women’s Rights Movement in the U.S., Cambridge, 1959.

Rec: Wells-Barnett, Ida. B., The Red Record: Tabulated Statistics & Alleged Causes of Lynchings in the United States, originally published 1895, republished 1969, 2005.

 

FOURTH PAPER: Two parts:

1. Recount the purpose of, plans for, and reasons for the failure of Reconstruction. AND

2. Describe the Kraditor/DuBois vs. the Aptheker/Lerner/Davis positions on the advisability of the split of the ERA. With whom do you agree and why?

 

VIII. Mexican American/Chicana women in the Southwest

The relationship between US labor demand and US immigration policy

Immigration and gender: The “Americanization” campaigns

 

READ: A/M 4: “The Soul of Tierra Madre: Chicana Women”

READ: Sanchez, George, “Go After the Women: Americanization & Mexican Immigrants” (from D/R)

READ: Garcia, “The Growth of Chicana Feminist Discourse” in D/R.

Rec: Acuna, Rodolfo, Occupied America: A History of Chicanos, HarperCollins, 1988.

Rec: Barrera, Mario, Race and Class in the Southwest,Univ. of Notre Dame Press, 1980, 2005.

 

Immigration reform and “Dreamers”

READ: Giovagnoli, “Overhauling Immigration Law: A Brief History and Basic Principles of Reform.”

SKIM: re: the Dream Act: http://www.immigrationpolicy.org/just-facts/dream-act-resource-page

Good source for current info on immigration reform: Immigration Policy Center:

http://www.immigrationpolicy.org/comprehensive-immigration-reform-2014

 

FIFTH PAPER: Describe, in some detail, the fluctuations in US government’s treatment of Mexican immigrants from the 1910s through the present day. Discuss the reasons for these fluctuations. OR

Describe the reasons for, and legalities of, comprehensive immigration reform.

 

IX. Women’s labor and anti-poverty activists

A short history of women in the early US labor movement: The AFL, the Knights, and the Wobblies

Rec: Le Blanc, Paul, A Short History of the U.S. Working Class, Humanity Books (Prometheus), 1999.

 

IX.A. Triangle and its aftermath

READ: “Triangle: The Fire That Changed Everything,” NY Times, Feb. 22, 2011.

READ: Tax, Meredith, “The Uprising of the 30,000” from D/R.

Highly Rec: Tax, Meredith, The Rising of the Women: Feminist Solidarity and Class Conflict 1880-1917,

Univ. of Illinois Press, 2001.

Rec: Von Drehle, Davis, Triangle: The Fire that Changed America, Grove Press, 2003.

IX.B. The Strengths and Contradictions of Cross-Class Gender Solidarity: The WTUL

READ: Dye, “Feminism or Unionism? The New York WTUL & the Labor Movement” 1980.

READ: Dye, “Creating a Feminist Alliance: Sisterhood and Class Conflict in the NY WTUL 1903-1914”

Rec: Dye, Nancy Schrom, As Equals and as Sisters: Feminism, the Labor Movement, and the WTUL of New York, Univ. of Missouri, 1980.

 

IX.C.1. The current state of the US labor movement

SKIM: Milkman & Luce (Murphy Center), The State of the Unions 2013: A Profile of Organized Labor in NYC, NY State, and the US.

READ: Warner (CEPR), “The Real Reason for the Decline of American Unions” 2013

READ: Macaray (Counterpunch), “Three Big Reasons for the Decline of Labor Unions, 2008.

Highly rec: Goldfield, Michael, The Decline of Organized Labor in the United States, Univ. Chicago, 1987.

 

IX.C.2. US Labor Law

READ: Brody, David, “How the Wagner Act Became a Management Tool,” New Labor Forum, Spr. 2004

READ: Becker, Craig, “Reconstructing the Right to Organize,” Fall/Winter 1998 and Benz, Dorothy, “The Case for Card Check Campaigns,” Fall/Winter 1998.

READ: Executive Summary and skim rest: Bronfenbrenner, Kate & Economic Policy Institute, No Holds Barred: The Intensification of Employer Opposition to Organizing.

Highly Rec: Lynd. Staughton, and Dan Gross, Labor Law for the Rank & File, 2nd ed., PM Press, 2011.

 

IX.D. Women in the current US labor movement

READ: Milkman, “Two Worlds of Unionism: Women in the New Labor Movement”

READ: Covert, ‘How the Rise of Women in Labor Could Save the Movement"

Rec: Milkman, Women, Work & Protest: A Century of US Women’s Labor History, Routledge, 1985

Rec: Cobble, The Other Women’s Movement, ch. 1 – 5. (We’ll read the rest of Cobble later.)

 

IX.E. Triangle Revisited: Rana Plaza and the contradictions of monitoring globalized corporations

READ/VIEW: Institute for Global Labor and Human Rights website. See especially the video, “Triangle Returns” on the right side of the site. http://www.globallabourrights.org/campaigns?id=0049.

READ/VIEW: Huffington Post updates on Bangladesh labor accords: www.huffingtonpost.com/tag/bangladesh-factory-collapse

READ: New York Times articles on Bangladesh tragedy (Greenhouse and others).

READ: Suroweicki, James, “After Rana Plaza,” New Yorker, May 20, 2013.

READ: Dudley, et al., “The Hidden Cost of Fast Fashion,” Business Week, 02/11-17/13.

READ: “ILO Statement on the Reform of Bangladesh Labor Law”

Rec: AFL-CIO, “Responsibility Outsourced: Social Audits, Workplace Certification and 20 Years of Failure to Protect Workers’ Rights”

 

X. The U.S. economy in the late 1800s/early 1900s: The impact on women's economic roles

Monopolization and internationalization

Changes in the labor process and labor control strategies; The impact on the demand for women’s labor

Changes in class structures: The rise of the professional-managerial class

 

 

READ: Edwards, selections from Contested Terrain: The Transformation of the Workplace in the 20th Century, Basic Books, 1979 (rest of book recommended.)

READ: Bowles, Edwards, Roosevelt, “American Capitalism: Accumulation and Change” (ch. 7 of Understanding Capitalism).

READ: Ehrenreich, John and Barbara, “The Professional Managerial Class,” Radical America, 1977.

 

SIXTH PAPER: Either:

Describe the changes in the US economy (both domestically and internationally) in the late 1800s/early 1900s. Explain, in some detail, the impact of these changes on the demand for women’s paid labor and on women’s occupational position. OR

Briefly identify/describe the following: Wagner Act, Jones v. Laughlin Steel, Taft-Hartley, non-Board recognition strategies, EFCA, social unionism. Discuss the possible reasons for and impact of the dramatic decline in unionization rates in the US since WWII. OR

Describe the strengths and weaknesses of global monitoring efforts of labor conditions.

 

XI. World War II: Impact on women's economic and social roles

XI.A.. “Rosie the Riveter” and the changes in women’s economic roles

READ: Milkman, “Redefining ‘Women’s Work’: Sexual Division of Labor in the Auto Industry in WWII”

Film: “The Life and Times of Rosie the Riveter”

 

XI.B. Jewish labor and the economics of the Holocaust

SKIM: “The Holocaust and Economic Exploitation” http://www.holocaustresearchproject.org/economics/

READ: Pagenstecher, “We Were Treated Like Slaves: Remembering Forced Labor for Nazi Germany”

READ: Kaplan, “Jewish Women in Nazi Germany: Daily Life, Daily Struggles” (Fem. St., 1990)

 

Rec: Gruner, Jewish Slave Labor Under the Nazis: Economic Needs & Racial Aims, Cambridge, 2006.

Rec: Suhl, Yuri, They Fought Back: The Story of Jewish Resistance in Nazi Europe, Shocken, 1987.

Rec: Dawidowicz, The War Against the Jews 1933-1945, Bantam, 1986.

Rec: Ofer & Weitzman (eds.), Women in the Holocaust, Yale Univ., 1998.

Rec: Kaplan, Between Dignity & Despair: Jewish Life in Nazi Germany, Oxford, 1998.

Rec: Poulantzas, Fascism &Dictatorship: The 3rd Internationale & the Problem of Fascism, Verso, 1974.

Rec: Mason & Caplan (eds.), Nazism, Fascism & the Working Class, Cambridge, 1995.

Rec: Coontz, Mothers in the Fatherland: Women, the Family, and Nazi Politics, St. Martin’s, 1987.

Rec: Bridenthal, et al., When Biology Became Destiny: Women in Weimar & Nazi Germany, MR, 1984.

 

XI.C. The impact of WWII: The seeds of the women’s and LGBT liberation movements

READ: Berube, Allan, “Coming Out Under Fire”

READ: D’Emilio, John, “Capitalism & Gay Identity”

 

XI.D. The impact of WWII on the Japanese American community

The economics of internment; The impact on Japanese American women and families

READ: Matsumoto, Valeria, “Japanese American Women During WWII,” 1984.

Film(s): “Come See the Paradise,” “Mitsuye and Nellie” (highly recommended)

Rec: Otsuka, Julie, When the Emperor was Divine, Anchor, 2003

 


SEVENTH PAPER. Either:

Describe the changes in the economic position of (non-Japanese American) women in the US during WWII; describe how these changes were supported by government, media & industry. OR

Describe the economic, political, and social position of Japanese Americans on the eve of WWII. Discuss the forces favoring internment; describe the impact of internment on their economic position. OR

Describe the economic context for, and consequences of, the Holocaust. OR

Using Berube, discuss how WWII and its aftermath contributed to the founding of the modern LGBT liberation movement.

 

XII. Asian American Women

Immigration law; Gendered immigration and women’s status

Commonalities and diversity: Asian American Women

 

READ: A/M 7: “Climbing Gold Mountain: Asian American Women”

READ: Yung, Judy, “The Social Awakening of Chinese American Women” D/R, 4th ed.

READ: Kelly, Gail Paradise, “To Become an American Woman: Education and Sex Role Socialization of Vietnamese Women” in D/R 3rd ed.

READ: Bhalla, “Couch Potatoes and SuperWomen: Gender, Migration and The Emerging Discourse on Housework Among Asian Indian Immigrants”

READ: Narayan, “Male Order Brides, Immigrant Women, Domestic Violence, and Immigration Law”

READ: Sinha, “Gender in the Critiques of Colonialism and Nationalism: Locating the ‘Indian Woman”

READ: Sayeed, “Chappals & Gym Shorts: An Indian Muslim Woman in the Land of Oz”

READ: Kumar, “Political Islam: A Marxist Analysis”

Film: “Mardi Gras: Made in China”

 

GUEST SPEAKER: Shemeem Abbas on the impact of Pakistan’s blasphemy laws on women

 

Rec: Interview of Leila Ahmed re: Muslim women and hijab: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_CTrbVqWW0

Highly Rec: Videos of speakers from “Re-envisioning Pakistan” conference, SLC, April 2014: http://new.livestream.com/SarahLawrence/re-envisioningpakistan

Rec: Deeb. “Silencing Religiosity: Secularity and Arab American Feminisms,” D/R.

 

Rec: The Buddha in the Attic, Anchor, 2012.

Rec: Bao, Xiaolan, Holding Up More Than Half the Sky: Chinese Women Garment Workers in NYC, Univ. of Ill., 2001.

Rec: Yu, Renqui, To Save China, To Save Ourselves: The Chinese Hand Laundry Association of NY, Temple Univ. Press, 1992.

Rec: Louie, Miriam Ching Yoon, Sweatshop Warriors: Immigrant Women Workers Take On the Global Factory, South End Press, 2001.

 

EIGHTH PAPER.

Discuss the challenges faced by a particular group of Asian women immigrants. Topics may include differences in gender roles in natal vs. American culture, the interaction of gendered and nationalist imagery in anti-colonialist discourse, or struggles over religiosity and secularism.

 

XIII. Puerto Rican women on the island and the mainland

Spanish and American colonialism; The nationalist movement, yesterday and today

Operation Bootstrap and the transformation of the Puerto Rican economy

Immigration and the sterilization campaign

Recent changes in the Puerto Rican economy and their implications for women’s employment

 

READ: A/M 8: “Yo Misma Fui Mi Ruta (I Was My Own Path)”

READ: Azize-Vargas, “The Emergence of Feminism in Puerto Rico” in D/R.

READ: Lugo –Lugo, “The Madonna Experience: A US Icon Awakens a Puerto Rican Adolescent’s Feminist Consciousness”

READ: La Luz, Jose, “Class Solidarity vs. the Pursuit of the Elusive Nation,” NLF, 2004.

 

Rec: Ayala, Cesar, Puerto Rico in the American Century: A History Since 1898, Univ. NC, 2007.

Rec: Fernandez, Ronald, The Disenchanted Island: Puerto Rico & the US in the 20th C., Prager, 1996.

Rec: Melendez, Edwin & Edgardo, Colonial Dilemma: Critical Perspectives on Contemporary Puerto Rico, South End Press, 1993.

Rec: CARASA (Committee for Abortion Rights & Against Sterilization Abuse), Women Under Attack: Abortion, Sterilization Abuse & Reproductive Freedom, 1979.

 

NINTH PAPER: Summarize the reasons for, and results of, Operation Bootstrap. Discuss the relationship between Bootstrap and the US/Island government campaign to sterilize Puerto Rican women.

 

XIV. The Growth of the 20th c. Women's Movement(s)

Changes in women's paid and unpaid labor in the 20th century

The relationship of the women's movement to the civil rights & new left/anti-war movements of the 1960s

 

READ: Evans, Sara, Personal Politics: The Roots of Women’s Liberation in the Civil Rights Movement and the New Left, Vintage, 1980.

READ: Stansell, The Feminist Promise, ch. 7 – 10.

READ: Cobble, The Other Women’s Movement, ch. 6 – 8.

                 Note: If you do not have much background in the history of 20th c. US feminism, you may wish to also read Ruth Rosen’s The World Split Open: How the Modern Women’s Movement Changed America 2001. 

 

TENTH PAPER. Two parts:

Briefly recount the reasons for the rise in women’s labor force participation rates (LFPR) in the postwar era. How did these increases in LFPR “set the stage” for the “second wave” of the women’s movement? AND Using Evans, describe the origins of the second wave of the US women’s movement in the civil rights, antiwar, and new left movements of the 1960s.

 

XV. Theories of Women’s Liberation to Emerge from 20th c. Feminist Movements

N.3.a. Radical and Lesbian Feminism

READ: Dworkin, “Marx and Gandhi were Liberals”

READ: Morgan, “Goodbye to All That”

Rec: “Redstockings Manifesto”

READ: MacKinnon, “Feminism, Marxism, Method, and the State: An Agenda for Theory”

READ: Brownmiller, “Against Our Will: Men, Women, and Rape”

READ: Firestone, “The Dialectic of Sex”

READ: Radicalesbians, “The Woman-Identified Woman”

READ: Bunch, “Lesbians in Revolt”

Rec: “Compulsory Heterosexuality & Lesbian Existence”

 

N.3.b. Socialist Feminism

READ: Rubin, “The Traffic in Women”

READ: Hartman, “Capitalism, Patriarchy, and Job Segregation by Sex”

READ: Christensen, “’With Whom Do You Believe Your Lot is Cast?’ White Feminists and Racism”

Rec: Robotham, “A Woman’s Place is in Her Union”

 

N.3.c. Women of Color Feminism

READ: “Combahee River Collective”

READ: Collins, “Defining Black Feminist Thought”

READ: Jordan, “Report from the Bahamas”

READ: Moraga, “From a Long Line of Vendidas”

READ: Narayan, “Westernization, Respect for Cultures, and Third World Feminists”

READ: Lorde, “The Master’s Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master’s House”

READ: Lorde, “The Uses of the Erotic”

 

N.3.d. Liberal Feminism

READ: Friedan, “The Problem That Has No Name”

READ: NOW Statement of Purpose

READ: Klein, “Is That All? The Feminine Mystique at Fifty”

Rec: Eisenstein, Zillah, The Radical Future of Liberal Feminism.

 

N.3. e. Postmodern Feminism

READ: Haraway, “A Manifesto for Cyborgs”

READ: Butler, “Gender Trouble: Feminism and the Subversion of Identity”

READ: Bordo, “Feminism, Postmodernism, and Gender Skepticism”

READ: Christian, “The Race for Theory” (critical)

READ: Nussbaum, “The Professor of Parody” (critical)

READ: Walters, “From Here to Queer”

 

ELEVENTH PAPER:

List and briefly explain the central tenets and the political implications of radical/lesbian, socialist, liberal, and postmodern feminism.

 

XVI. Progress and Obstacles – Feminism in the 21st c.

Note: Writing assignments for section XVI will be explained in class.

 

XVI.A. Continuing Economic Inequality by Gender and Race/Ethnicity

READ: Christensen, “’He-cession, She-cession’: The Gendered Impact of the Great Recession,” RRPE, forthcoming.

READ: IWPR, “The Gender Wage Gap by Occupation, and by Race and Ethnicity, 2013”

Rec: Berik, Gunseli, “Time Use by Parents in the US: What Difference Did the Great Recession Make?”

XVI.B. The persistence of the double day

READ: Hochschild, The Second Shift

Rec: Crittenden, Ann, The Price of Motherhood: Why the Most Important Job in the World is Still the Least Valued, Owl Books, 2001.

 

XVI.C. The battle over reproductive rights

READ: “Who Decides? The Status of Women’s Reproductive Rights in the US,” NARAL, 2014

READ: Intro & selections from Nelson, Women of Color & the Reproductive Rights Movement, 2013.

Rec: CARASA (Committee for Abortion Rights and Against Sterilization Abuse), Women Under Attack: Abortion, Sterilization Abuse, and Reproductive Freedom, 1979.

Reread/Skim: Davis, Angela, “Racism, Birth Control, and Reproductive Rights”

 

XVI.D.1. The LGBT Movement – Economic and historical context

READ: Matthaei, “The Sexual Division of Labor, Sexuality, and Lesbian/Gay Liberation: Towards a Marxist-Feminist Analysis of Sexuality in Capitalism,” RRPE, 1995.

READ: Christensen, LGBT Encyclopedia entry, “Economics”

Highly rec: Jacobsen, Joyce, and Adam Zeller, Queer Economics: A Reader, Routledge, 2008.

READ: Stein, “The Incredible Shrinking Lesbian World and Other Queer Conundra.” Sexualities, 2010.

READ: Cheryl Clarke, et al., “25 Years after Stonewall: Looking Backward, Moving Forward,” from Duberman/CLAGS, A Queer World, NYU, 1997.

 

XVI.D.2. The controversies over ENDA

READ: O’Keefe, “ENDA Explained” Washington Post, Nov. 2013.

Rec: HRC on ENDA: http://www.hrc.org/laws-and-legislation/federal-legislation/employment-non-discrimination-act

 

XVI.D. 3. Marriage equality

Success of and controversies about the marriage equality movement

VIEW: Freedom to Marry website re: marriage equality in the states

http://www.freedomtomarry.org/states/

SEE ALSO the NY Times chronology of the evolution of marriage laws:

http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference/timestopics/subjects/s/same_sex_marriage/index.html

SEE ALSO: Martha Hardy’s compilation of news, law, and background information on same-sex marriage:

http://crln.acrl.org/content/74/6/304.full

 

READ: Graff, “What’s So Radical About Same Sex Marriage?”

READ: Stein, “What’s Wrong with Newark? Race, Class, Marriage Politics, and the Limits of Queer Liberalism” from Bernstein, 2013

READ: Duggan, “Beyond Marriage”

VIEW: Nation interview with Amber Holibaugh: http://www.thenation.com/video/168582/amber-l-hollibaugh-lgbtq-movements-radical-vision#

Rec: Bernstein, Mary, The Marrying Kind? Debating Same Sex Marriage within the Lesbian and Gay Movement, Univ. of Minnesota, 2013.

 

 

XVI.D. 4. Trans and the definition of gender

Highly recommended text: Currah, Paisley, Richard Juang, and Shannon Minter (PJM), Transgender Rights, Univ. of Minnesota Press, 2006.

READ: Currah, “Gender Pluralisms Under the Transgender Umbrella” (in PJM)

READ: Greenberg, “The Road Less Traveled” (in PJM)

READ: Minter, “Do Transsexuals Dream of Gay Rights? Getting Real About Transgender Inclusion”

READ: Goldberg, “What is a Woman?” (New Yorker, 08/04/14)

Rec: Broadus, “The Evolution of Employment Discrimination Protections for Transgender People”

Possible Guest Speaker, Paisley Currah, Queens College/CUNY, Former ED of CLAGS

 

 

XVII. GLOBAL FEMINISM

READ: Bunch, “Women’s Human Rights: From Slogan to Global Agenda”

READ: “An Activist Temperament: An Interview with Charlotte Bunch”

(re)READ: Rich, “Towards a Politics of Location”

READ: Stansell, Ch. XI, “Global Feminism: The Age of Reagan & Beyond”

READ: Mohanty, “Under Western Eyes, Revisited: Feminist Solidarity Through Anti-Capitalist Struggle”

READ: Basu, “Globalization of the Local: Mapping Transnational Women’s Movements”

READ: Eisenstein, Feminism Seduced: How Global Elites Use Women’s Labor and Ideas to Exploit the World, Paradigm, 2009.

Highly Rec:Lewis, Reina and Sara Mills, Feminist Postcolonial Theory: A Reader, Routledge, 2003.

Rec: Beneria, Lourdes, et al., Intro to special issue of Feminist Economics on Globalization and Gender.

 

Possible final paper (depending on time) on the promise and limitations of/problems with global feminism.

 

 

 


Political Economy of Women - Student Information (Feel free to use the back!)

Name:

 

 

Year in school:

 

 

Phone(s):

 

 

Email address(es):

 

 

Don:

 

 

Please list your primary academic interests/fields (American history, math, art history, etc.):

 

 

 

Have you taken other courses either in economics or in gender studies? If yes, please list.

 

 

 

 

Is English your first language?

 

Do you have any learning or other disabilities that I should know about? If yes, what accommodations do you require?

 

 

 

Why are you interested in taking this course?

 

 

 

 

What social/political issues concern you the most?

 

 

 

Do you consider yourself to be a feminist? Why or why not?

 

 

 

  • 1. Syllabus, review questions/assignments, and course mechanics

    Required
    PEW SYLLABUS - August 26, 2014.rtf
    Required
    PEW rev qes 09-18-14.docx
    Required
    PEW rev qes 12-04-14.docx
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  • 2. Conceptual framework

    Required
    hooks_feminism_a_movement_to_end_sexist_oppression.pdf
    Required
    rich_notes_toward_a_politics_of_location.pdf
    Required
    Mohanty - UNder Western Eyes REVISITED.pdf
    Required
    HARTSOCK - The Feminist Standpoint.pdf
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  • 3. Iroquois (Haudensaunee)

    Required
    jensen,_joan_native_american_women_and_agriculture.pdf
    Required
    Iroquois - Brown - Econ Org.pdf
    Required
    PERDUE - Trail of TEars.pdf
    Required
    Paula GUnn Allen - Red ROots of WHite FEminism.pdf
    Required
    Whitehead - The_Bow_and_the_burden_strap.pdf
    Required
    Callendar - N.Am. Berdache & comments.pdf
    Required
    BLACKWOOD - Gender, SExuality in Certain North American Tribes - SIgns 1984 Autumn.pdf
    Required
    EPI - Native Americans & Jobs 2013.pdf
    Required
    PERDUE - Trail of TEars.pdf
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  • 4. White women in colonial America

    Required
    KESSLER-HARRIS OUT TO WORK CH. 1 & 2.pdf
    Required
    FOLBRE - Pat in Colonial New Eng.pdf
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  • 5. African American women in South

    Required
    Grey White - FEmale Slaves.pdf
    Required
    Births by marital status 2012.pdf
    Required
    Understanding Out of WEdlock Black Birth - ATlantic 2013.docx
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  • 6. Transition to capitalism/Salem witch trials

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  • 7. Cult of true womanhood

    Required
    lady and mill girl - Lerner.pdf
    Required
    Cult of True Womanhood - Barbara WElter 1966 American Quarterly.pdf
    Required
    Leila Rupp - critique of Cult of True Womanhood - JWH spr 2002.pdf
    Required
    Mary Roberts - Crit of CUlt of True Womanhood - JWH spr 2002.pdf
    Required
    Nancy Hewitt - Crit of Cult - JWH spr 2002.pdf
    Required
    Donna Guy - Crit of Cult (womenin Latin Am) JWH spr 2002.pdf
    Required
    Tracy Fessenden - Crit of Cult - JWH spr 2002.pdf
    Required
    ANN FERGUSON - Patriarchy, Sexual Identity (re D'Emilio).pdf
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  • 8. Abolition/Reconstruction, Women's rights

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  • 9. Mexican American Chicana women

    Required
    sanchez,_george_go_after_the_women[1].pdf
    Required
    Garcia - Chicana Feminist Discourse.pdf
    Required
    Giovagnoli - Overhauling Immigration Law - Immigration POlicy Center.docx
    Required
    EPI-Immigration-Facts-08-12-2014.pdf
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  • 10. Labor: Triangle, WTUL

    Required
    Triangle - Fire that changed everything - NYT.docx
    Required
    WTUL Feminism or Unionism - Dye 1975 Fem St..pdf
    Required
    WTUL Class conflict Dye 1975 Fem Studies.pdf
    Required
    Tax - The Uprising of the Thirty Thousand.pdf
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  • 11. Labor: current, labor law

    Required
    STATE OF THE UNIONS 2013 - RUth & Stephanie.pdf
    Required
    Warner - Real REason for Decline of American UNions (Bloomberg CEPR) .doc
    Required
    Macaray - THree Reasons for DEcline.doc
    Required
    Brody - Wagner Act Became Management Tool.pdf
    Required
    Becker - Reconstructing the Right in html.docx
    Required
    Benz - Case for Card Check in html.docx
    Required
    Bronfenbrenner - No HOlds Barred - EPI.pdf
    Required
    Milkman - Two worlds of unionism.pdf
    Required
    Nation - How_the_Rise_of_Women_in_Labor_Could_Save_the_Movement[1].doc
    Required
    LaborLawForTheRank&Filer_v2[1] - Lynd & GRoss.pdf
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  • 12. Rana Plaza, monitoring globalized corporations

    Required
    Greenhouse - NYT - Fast and Flawed Inspections of Factories Abroad - 09-02-13.docx
    Required
    GReenhouse - Flawed Inspections.docx
    Required
    New Yorker - After Rana Plaza.doc
    Required
    Biz Wk - Hidden Cost of Fast Fashion - Feb. 11, 2013.pdf
    Required
    ILO statement on reform of Bangladesh labour law.doc
    Required
    AFLCIO Rana Plaza Report (60 pp).pdf
    Required
    NYT BANGLADESH INSPECTIONS Oct. 13-14, 2014.docx
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  • 13. Early 1900s: monopolization, rise of PMC

    Required
    PMC Ehrenreichs - Rad Am 1977.pdf
    Required
    EDWARDS - COntested Terrain - Three_Faces_from_the_Hidden_Abode.pdf
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  • 14. WWII

    Required
    MILKMAN - WOMEN in AUTOS WWII - Fem. St. 1982.pdf
    Required
    berube,_allan_coming_out_under_fire.pdf
    Required
    DEmilio - Kism and Gay Identity.pdf
    Required
    MATSOMOTO - Japanese women in WWII.pdf
    Required
    pagenstecher-2010b-treated-like-slaves.pdf
    Required
    Kaplan - Jewish Women in Nazi Germany - FS 1990.pdf
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  • 15. Asian American women WWII to the present

    Required
    Yung - The_Social_Awakening_of_Chinese_American_Women.pdf
    Required
    KELLY - Vietnamese - To_become_an_American_Woman.pdf
    Required
    Bhalla - Couch Potatoes & Super Women - HHL among Indian immigrants.pdf
    Required
    Narayan - Mail Order Brides & DV 1995.pdf
    Required
    sinha_gender_in_the_critiques_of_colonialism_nationalism.pdf
    Required
    Kumar - Political Islam - A MArxist Analysis.doc
    Required
    Sayeed - Chappals_and_Gym_Shorts.pdf
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  • 16. Puerto Rican women

    Required
    La Luz - CLass soldiarity vs the elusive nation - NLF 2004.docx
    Required
    Lugo Lugo - Madonna Experience (PR) 2001.pdf
    Required
    Azize-Vargas - The Emergence of Feminism in Puerto Rico.pdf
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  • 18. Radical/Lesbian feminism

    Required
    dworkin_marx_gandhi_were_liberals.pdf
    Required
    morgan_goodbye_to_all_that.pdf
    Required
    redstockings_manifesto.pdf
    Required
    mackinnon_feminism_marxism_method_and_state.pdf
    Required
    brownmiller_against_our_will.pdf
    Required
    firestone_the_dialectic_of_sex.pdf
    Required
    radicalesbians_the_woman_identified_woman.pdf
    Required
    bunch_lesbians_in_revolt.pdf
    Required
    rich_compulsory_heterosexuality_and_lesbian_existence.pdf
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  • 19. Socialist/Marxist feminism

    Required
    rubin_the_traffic_in_women.pdf
    Required
    hartmann_capitalism,_patriarchy,_and_job_segregation_by_sex.pdf
    Required
    rowbotham_a_womans_place_is_in_her_union.pdf
    Required
    Feminism, Racism (Lot is Cast) - Signs 1997.pdf
    Required
    Soc Fem - History of WOST - FEm. St. Fall 2008.pdf
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  • 20. Women of color feminism

    Required
    combahee_river_collection_a_black_feminist_statement.pdf
    Required
    collins_defining_black_feminist_thought.pdf
    Required
    jordan_report_from_the_bahamas.pdf
    Required
    moraga_from_a_long_line_of_vendidas.pdf
    Required
    lorde_the_uses_of_the_erotic.pdf
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  • 21. Liberal feminism

    Required
    friedan_the_problem_that_has_no_name.pdf
    Required
    now_statement_of_purpose.pdf
    Required
    KLEIN ON FRIEDAN - Nation April 2013.pdf
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  • 22. Postmodern feminism

    Required
    haraway_a_manifesto_for_cyborgs.pdf
    Required
    bordo_feminism,_postmodernism,_and_gender_skepticism.pdf
    Required
    christian_the_race_of_theory.pdf
    Required
    Professor of Parody - Nussbaum.pdf
    Required
    Walters - From Here TO Queer - Signs 1996.pdf
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  • 23. Feminism in 21st c: Progress & Continuing Inequality

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  • 25. Feminism in 21st c.: Reproductive rights

    Required
    ABORION - NARAL WHo Decides - Status of Abortion RIghts in the US 2014.pdf
    Required
    Reproductive RIghts Inclusive.pdf
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  • 26. LGBT movement: economic/historical context

    Required
    Christensen ENCYCLOPEDIA - LGBT ECON - 11-03-06.doc
    Required
    Stein - Incredible Shrinking Lesbian WOrld.pdf
    Required
    Clarke - Twenty-five_Years_after_Stonewall.pdf
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  • 27. LGBT movement: ENDA, Marriage equality

    Required
    O'Keefe - ENDA Explained.docx
    Required
    Graff re S-S marriage (pro).docx
    Required
    Stein, What's the MAtter with Newark - Race, Class, Marriage POlitics.pdf
    Required
    Lisa Duggan - Beyond Marriage.docx
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  • 28. Trans & definition of gender(s)

    Required
    What Is a Woman - GOldberg, New Yorker 08-04-14.docx
    Required
    Paisley - Gender_Pluralisms_under_the_Transgender_Umbrella.pdf
    Required
    Greemberg - The_Road_Less_Traveled.pdf
    Required
    Minter - Do Trans Dream.pdf
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  • 29. Global feminism?

    Required
    Bunch - WOMen's Human RIghts.docx
    Required
    BUNCH - INterview with CHarlotte Bunch.pdf
    Required
    rich_notes_toward_a_politics_of_location.pdf
    Required
    Basu - Globalization of the Local - Meridians 2000.pdf
    Required
    Beneria - Globalization & Gender.pdf
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  • 30. Misc.

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  • Ungrouped

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While focused on a reorder icon, press the Enter key or spacebar to "select" the icon. While a reorder icon is selected, pressing the up and down arrows will change the order of the selected item within the list. Pressing Enter key or spacebar again will drop the selected item at that location in the list.