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Professing Feminism: Cautionary Tales From Inside The Strange World Of Women's Studies
by
Two respected feminist scholars show how political correctness has turned academic feminism into a parody of itself and suggest how to get back on track.
"Dismayed by what they claim are the dogmatic methods inherent in many women's studies programs, Patai and Koertge, two feminist academics, urgently call for introspection and reform. Recounting the experiences of colleag ...more
"Dismayed by what they claim are the dogmatic methods inherent in many women's studies programs, Patai and Koertge, two feminist academics, urgently call for introspection and reform. Recounting the experiences of colleag ...more
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Paperback, 256 pages
Published
September 21st 1995
by Basic Books
(first published October 28th 1970)
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Start your review of Professing Feminism: Cautionary Tales From Inside The Strange World Of Women's Studies
This is a book about feminism in academia, Women's Studies, and how much it has gone downhill from being a fresh, new voice for women, exposing women's historical stories and contributions to our culture, into an intolerant, hostile boot camp for indocrinating women to become feminists. It's written by two former Women's Studies professors. A quote by Albert Camus at the beginning gives a sense for their role: "Every revolutionary ends by becoming either an oppressor or a heretic." They were spe
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This book is really about the field of "women's studies" in American universities, not feminism per se, which seems substantially different for the most part. It's worth reading for anyone interesting in feminism in academe, since much of that is tied in with women's studies departments. It's also worth reading if you want an example of what can happen when political ideology supplants rigorous standards of rationality and empiricism. Once again, the academic left is making a fool of itself.
I did not need to read much of this book to understand that it is an outdated complaint of second wave feminists who do not enjoy that the development of the discipline did not end with them. In the most curious irony, they complain that established feminists won’t allow critique of Women’s Studies and then also complain that the young students are critiquing Women’s Studies unfairly. This is unquestionably racist in the most wholly unexamined way, but in the way that is a trademark of academia
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