The
purpose of this course is to introduce students to the interdisciplinary
field of feminist scholarship, which seeks to understand the creation
and perpetuation of gender inequalities. After tracing the historical
emergence of feminist critiques, the course surveys contemporary feminist
issues, particularly work and sexuality, and contemporary strategies
for social change. Each section draws on historical analysis and
pays close attention to the variety of women's experiences. Along
with the focus on the United States, an effort has been made to incorporate
international perspectives on women and feminism. No prior course
work is required to take FS101, but a sincere commitment to understanding
feminism and a willingness to undertake a demanding course are essential.
Beyond the presumption that gender inequality is unjust, the course
takes no single political perspective. A major goal is to train
students in analytical skills that will help them think critically about
gender in the past, the present, and the future. This course fulfills
the requirements for Writing in the Major (Feminist Studies), writing
(History), and Gender Studies (GER). It is NOT available
pass/no credit. Additional units for public service internships
are available through the Program in Feminist Studies and the Haas Center,
either this quarter or winter quarter.
REQUIRED
BOOKS (available at Stanford Bookstore and Meyer Library Reserve):
Laurel Richardson,
Verta Taylor, & Nancy Whittier, eds. FEMINIST FRONTIERS
IV
Buchi Emecheta,
THE JOYS OF MOTHERHOOD
Virginia Woolf,
THREE GUINEAS
Marge Piercy,
WOMAN ON THE EDGE OF TIME
FS101 COURSE
READER (required) sold after class 9/24 and 9/29 (Field/Copyperfect,
323-1025)
COURSE REQUIREMENTS
(See end of syllabus for due dates and small groups) Attend
all classes; complete all reading; participate in all 9 discussion sections
(section participation influences your final grade)
- View each
required film at Meyer A-V and submit brief journal commentaries
in class the day film is assigned
- Submit two
mid-term papers (c. 5-6 pp. each) integrating readings, films, and
discussions (choice of questions given out a week in advance); one
of these papers will be revised based on writing feedback from your
section leader.
- Submit one
take-home final, answering from a choice of questions, c. 10 pages
- Participate
in all 8 small group meetings and submit one 4-5 page paper (ungraded
but required) reporting on small group learning, based in
part on journal entries
All written
work must be printed, double spaced, with adequate margins and normal
size font, and must be submitted on the date due, by the time deadline.
Late papers will be downgraded a full grade per day and will not be
accepted after one day. Extensions and incompletes will not be
granted except in the case of medical or family emergencies (in these
cases, please contact T.A. or instructor as soon as possible).
CLASS
NUMBER, DATES, TOPICS, AND READINGS
All assignments are required unless marked REC
(recommended)
9/24:
Introduction: WHAT IS FEMINIST STUDIES?
Muriel Rukeyser,
"Myth," COURSE READER (hereafter RDR)
Audre Lorde,
"The Masters Tools Will Never Dismantle the Master's House,"
FEMINIST FRONTIERS IV (hereafter FFIV), p. 26
Adrienne Rich,
"Notes Towards a Politics of Location," RDR
I.
Before Feminism: Origins of Inequality
9/29:
THEORIES OF NATURE AND CULTURE
- Ruth Hubbard,
"The Political Nature of 'Human Nature'," RDR
- Judith Lorber,
"'Night To His Day': The Social Construction of Gender," FFIV, p.
33
- Nancy Chodorow,
"Family Structure and Feminine Personality" FFIV, p. 145
- Barrie Thorne,
"Girls and Boys Together . . . " FFIV, p. 176
- Neera Kuckreja
Sohoni, "Girls in Development," RDR
- REC
WEB PAGE: Socialization
- REC:
Elizabeth V. Spelman, "Gender in the Context of Race and Class:
Notes on Chodorow's 'Reproduction of Mothering'" FFIV, p. 158
10/1:
TRADITION AND COLONIALISM
- Emecheta,
The Joys of Motherhood [complete for section]
- "Small
Happiness" required film on reserve
First sections meet
on Oct 2 or 3; bring 1-2 page reading responses.
Initial small group meetings should be held by October
10 and weekly thereafter. For the first meting, please read the
section on small groups at the end of the syllabus and the following
short essays:
- Pam Allen,
"Free Space," RDR
- Irene Restikis,
"Resistance to CR" RDR
- Lynet Uttal,
"Nods That Silence," RDR
II.
The Emergence of Western Feminist Theory and Practice
10/6:
THE RIGHTS OF WOMAN AND THE LIBERATION OF WOMEN: LIBERAL, RADICAL,
AND SOCIALIST FEMINISMS
- Sor Juana,
"If You Are Not Pleased...," RDR
- Mary Wollstonecraft,
"A Vindication of the Rights of Woman," RDR
- "Declaration
of Sentiments, Seneca Falls," RDR
- Huda Sh'arawi,
"Egyptian Women's Movement," RDR
- Barbara Ehrenreich,
"What is Socialist Feminism," RDR
- Woolf, THREE
GUINEAS, esp. pp. 3-84, 99-117, 143-44 [for section
- REC
WEB PAGE: A
Vindication of the Rights of Woman
10/8:
GENDER AND RACE IN "FIRST AND SECOND WAVE" U.S. FEMINISMS
- Sojourner
Truth, "Ain't I A Woman," FFIV, p. 20
- Estelle Freedman,
"Separatism as Strategy," RDR
- Combahee
River Collective Statement, RDR
- Esther Ngan-Ling
Chow, "The Development of Feminist Consciousness Among Asian American
Women," RDR
- Patricia
Hill Collins, "The Social Construction of Black Feminist Thought,"
FFIV, p. 101
- WEB PAGE:
Chicana Feminisms
- REC:
Stephanie J. Shaw, "Black Club Women and the Creation of the National
Association of Colored Women," FFIV, p. 499
10/13: GLOBAL
FEMINISMS
- "A Veiled
Revolution," required film on reserve
- Rich, "Notes
Toward a Politics of Location," RDR (reread)
- Domitila
Barrios de la Chungara, from "Women and Organization" RDR
- F. Rahman,
"No Return to the Veil," RDR
- Chandra Mohanty,
"Under Western Eyes: Feminist Scholarship and Colonial Discourses,"
RDR
- WEB PAGE:
Beijing
'95, 3rd
World Women; browse in Global
Feminism
Topics for the first paper will be distributed in class
today; due in class on 10/20; rewrites are due 10/27.
10/15:
RESISTANCE, ALLIANCES, AND COALITIONS
- Bernice Johnson
Reagon, "Coalition Politics" RDR
- Gloria Anzaldua,
"En rapport, In Opposition: Cobrando cuentas a las nuestras" FFIV,
p. 139
- Cherrie Moraga,
"From a Long Line of Vendidas: Chicanas and Feminism," RDR
- R. W. Connell,
"Hegemonic Masculinity and Emphasized Femininity," FFIV p. 22
- Michael S.
Kimmell, "Judaism, Masculinity, and Feminism," FFIV, p. 530
- Peter Blood,
Alan Tuttle, and George Lakey, "Understanding and Fighting Sexism:
A Call to Men," RDR
- REC:
Gloria Yamato, "Something about the Subject Makes it Hard to Name,"
FFIV, 28 and Paula Gunn Allen, "Where I Come From is Like This,"
FFIV, p. 18
III. Contemporary
Feminist Issues I: Work and Family
10/20:
THE FAMILY ECONOMY AND TRADITIONAL WOMEN'S WORK
- Om Naeema,
"Fisherwoman," RDR
- Pat Mainardi,
"The Politics of Housework," RDR
- Bonnie Thornton
Dill, "'The Means to Put My Children Through'" FFIV, p. 161
- Arlie Hochschild,
"The Second Shift" FFIV, p. 263
10/22:
THE TRANSITION TO WAGE LABOR
- Alice
Kessler-Harris, "The Wage Conceived," FFIV, p. 201
- Barbara
F. Reskin, "Bringing the Men Back In" FFIV, p. 215
- Denise
A. Segura, "Working at Motherhood: Chicana and Mexican Immigrant
- Mothers
and Employment," FFIV, p. 268
- Sonia,
"I Never Have Time to Sit Down" RDR
- WEB
PAGE: Guerrilla
Girls poster on work; Working
Women Data
- REC:
Emily Honig, "Burning Incense, Pledging Sisterhood: Communities
of Women Workers in the Shanghai Cotton Mills, 1919-1949," FFIV,
P. 485
- REC:
"Rosie the Riveter," Meyer AV film reserve
10. 10/27:
THE GLOBAL ECONOMY: WAGE LABOR AND SEXUAL LABOR
- "The
Global Assembly Line" required film on reserve
- Amber
Ault and Eve Sandberg, "When the Oppressors Are Us" RDR
- Ault
and Sandberg, "Our Policies, Their Consequences: Zambian Women's
Lives Under 'Structural Adjustment,' FFIV, p. 493
- Miriam
Ching Louie, "Immigrant Asian Women," RDR
- Cynthia
Enloe, "It Takes More Than Two," RDR
- Jacqueline
Cuevas, "Nicaraguan Prostitutes" RDR
11. 10/29:
SOCIAL POLICIES AND SOCIAL WELFARE
- Myra
Marx Ferree, "Patriarchies and Feminisms: The Two Women's Movements
of Post-Unification Germany," FFIV, p. 526
- Wahneema
Lubiano, "Black Ladies, Welfare Queens, and State Minstrels:
Ideological War by Narrative Means," RDR
- Kathryn
Edin, "Surviving the Welfare System: How AFDC Recipients Make
Ends Meet in Chicago," FFIV, p. 447
- WEB
PAGE: Prison Data
*SUNDAY,
NOVEMBER 2, Conference:
"Towards a More
Compassionate Society"
IV.
Contemporary Issues II: Sexuality and Health
12. 11/3:
WHOSE BODY? I: HEALTH, FOOD, AND BEAUTY
-
Charlotte
Perkins Gilman, "The Yellow Wallpaper" RDR
- Nellie
Wong, "When I Was Growing Up," RDR
- Nancy
Mairs, "Body in Trouble"
- Roberta
Galler, "The Myth of the Perfect Body," FFIV, p. 342
- Carol
Munter, "Fat and the Fantasy of Perfection" RDR
- Becky
Wangsgaard Thompson, "'A Way Outa No Way': Eating Problems Among
African-American, Latina, and White Women," FFIV, p. 366
- WEB
PAGE: Fat
Girls
- REC
WEB PAGE: The
Yellow Wallpaper Site
13. 11/5:
WHOSE BODY? II: MEDIA AND MEDICINE
- "Mirror
Mirror," and "Still Killing Us Softly," films in class (responses
due in section)
- Susan
M. Love, MD with Karen Lindsey, "The Politics of Breast Cancer,"
FFIV, p. 384
- Adi Gevins,
"Tackling Tradition," RDR
- AAWORD,
"A Statement on Genital Mutilation" RDR
- REC:
Ann Fausto-Sterling, "Hormonal Hurricanes: Menstruation, Menopause,
and Female Behavior," FFIV, p. 343 and Gloria Steinem,
"If Men Could Menstruate," FFIV, p. 358
14. 11/10:
REPRODUCTION
- Angela
Y. Davis, "Racism, Birth Control, and Reproductive Rights,"
RDR
- Davis,
"Outcast Mothers and Surrogates: Racism and Reproductive Politics
in the Nineties," FFIV, p. 375
- Eleanor
Miller, "When the Political Becomes the Personal" FFIV, p. 378
- "A Personal
Account," RDR
- Karen
Schneiderman, "Disabled Women Need Choice, Too," RDR
- Mercedes
Sayaguez, "What the State Neglects," RDR
- REC:
Ricki Solinger, "Race and 'Value': Black and White Illegitimate
Babies, 1945-1965," FFIV, p. 282
- REC
WEB PAGE: Reproductive
Choices, Sterilization
Abuse
15. 11/12:
SEXUALITIES
- Deborah
L. Tolman, "Doing Desire: Adolescent Girls' Struggles for/with
Sexuality," FFIV, p. 337
- Adrienne
Rich, "Compulsory Heterosexuality and Lesbian Existence," FFIV,
p. 81
- Ellen
Lewin, "Negotiating Lesbian Motherhood: The Dialectics of Resistance
and Accommodation," FFIV, p. 295
- Catharine
MacKinnon, "Francis Biddle's Sister: Pornography, Civil Rights,
and Speech," RDR
- "Against
the Ordinance," RDR
- "Choosing
Children," required film on reserve
- REC:
Judith Shapiro, "Transsexualism: Reflections on the Persistence
of Gender and the Mutability of Sex," FFIV, p. 48
16. 11/17:
SEX AND VIOLENCE I: RAPE AND HARASSMENT
- Mary
Ann Tetreault, "Accountability or Justice? Rape as a War Crime,"
FFIV, p. 427
- Alexandra
Stiglmayer, Mass Rape, RDR
- Cheryl
Benard and Edit Schlaffer, "The Man in the Street: Why He Harasses,"
FFIV, p. 395
- Patricia
Yancey Martin and Robert A. Hummer, "Fraternities and Rape on
Campus" FFIV, p. 398
- Robert
L. Allen and Paul Kivel, "Men Changing Men," FFIV, p. 400
- Pauline
Bart and Patricia H. O'Brien, "Stopping Rape: Effective Avoidance
Strategies" FFIV, p. 410
Topics for the
second paper will be distributed in class; due by class on 11/24;
rewrites are due Dec. 1.
17. 11/19:
SEX AND VIOLENCE II: DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AND CHILD ABUSE
V. Feminist
Strategies and Utopian Visions
18. 11/24:
MOVEMENTS FOR SOCIAL CHANGE: WAR, PEACE, SPIRITUALITY
- Carol
J. Adams, "Ecofeminism" FFIV, p. 512
- Helen
Caldicott, "Eradicate Nuclear Weapons from the Face of the Earth,"
RDR
- Elisabeth
Schussler Fiorenza, Bread Not Stone, intro, RDR
- Aviva
Cantor, "Jewish Women's Haggadah," RDR
- Audre
Lorde, "An Open Letter to Mary Daly" RDR
- Laura
M. Markowitz, "Buddhist Nuns Buck the System," MS. July-August,
1995
- WEB
PAGE: Sylvia
Reproduced by permission, 9/17/97. Copyright 1997.
All rights reserved.
19. 11/26:
LANGUAGE AND CREATIVITY I -- Speech, Sound, and Imagination
- "Voices
from Inside," Required film on reserve (response due next Monday)
- Laurel
Richardson, "Gender Stereotyping in the English Language" FFIV,
p. 115
- Gloria
Anzaldua, "How to Tame a Wild Tongue," RDR
- Ursula
LeGuin, "On the Mothertongue," RDR
- Alice
Walker, "In Search of Our Mothers Gardens," RDR
- Michele
Wallace, "Women Rap Back," FFIV, p. 130
- Catalina
Rios, "Three Tongues," RDR
- Joy Harjo,
"For Alva Benson, and for Those Who Have Learned to Speak,"
RDR
- REC:
Cynthia M. Lont, "Women's Music: No Longer a Small Private Party,"
FFIV, p. 126
No sections
this week (Thanksgiving break), but be sure to begin reading Piercy,
Woman on the Edge of Time, for discussion in class and in
section next week
20. 12/1:
LANGUAGE AND CREATIVITY II: Utopian and Dystopian Visions
- Christa
Wolf, "Self Experiment," RDR
- Rokeya
Sakhawat Hossain, "Sultana's Dream," RDR
- Li Ju-Chen,
Flowers in the Mirror, ch. 13, RDR
- Piercy,
Woman on the Edge of Time (complete for section)
- WEB
PAGE: Art Data, Feminist
Bookstores, Guerrilla
Girls
- REC
WEB PAGE: Feminist
Science Fiction
21. 12/3: POLITICS
AND EDUCATION
- Verta
Taylor and Nancy Whittier, "The New Feminist Movement," FFIV,
p. 544
- Lilia
Quindoza Santiago, "Rebirthing Babaye: The Women's Movement
in the Phillipines," RDR
- Adrienne
Rich, "Towards a Woman-Centered University" RDR
- bell
hooks, "Black Students Who Reject Feminism," FFIV, p. 546
- REC:
Abigail Halcli and Jo Reger, "Strangers in a Strange Land: The
Gendered Experiences of Women Politicians in Britain and the
United States," FFIV, p. 457; Gloria Steinem, "Helping Ourselves
to Revolution," FFIV, p. 554
- REC.
WEB: South
Asian Women's Organizations
Small group
learning papers due in class today; last sections this week.
Take home final exam questions distributed in class
today; due in History Department Office by 3 p.m on Wed., 12/10.
fs101
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